Searching for a Mate: Pheromone-Directed Movement of the Benthic Diatom Seminavis robusta.

Bondoc KG, Lembke C, Vyverman W, Pohnert G (2016) Searching for a Mate: Pheromone-Directed Movement of the Benthic Diatom Seminavis robusta. Microb Ecol 72(2), 287-294. PubMed

ILRS Authors

Christine Kiel

Projects

Diatom pheromones – structure and function of communication mediators of unicellular algae
Details

Abstract

Diatoms are species-rich microalgae that often have a unique life cycle with vegetative cell size reduction followed by size restoration through sexual reproduction of two mating types (MT(+) and MT(-)). In the marine benthic diatom Seminavis robusta, mate-finding is mediated by an L-proline-derived diketopiperazine, a pheromone produced by the attracting mating type (MT(-)). Here, we investigate the movement patterns of cells of the opposite mating type (MT(+)) exposed to a pheromone gradient, using video monitoring and statistical modeling. We report that cells of the migrating mating type (MT(+)) respond to pheromone gradients by simultaneous chemotaxis and chemokinesis. Changes in movement behavior enable MT(+) cells to locate the direction of the pheromone source and to maximize their encounter rate towards it.

Identifier

PMID: 27260155

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