From pearl At dsi.uanl.mx Mon Nov 6 12:21:08 2006 From: pearl At dsi.uanl.mx (paul earl) Date: Mon Nov 6 12:30:51 2006 Subject: [Protista] Macronuclear regeneration Message-ID: <454F6F04.2080608@dsi.uanl.mx> Discovered in 1940 in Paramecium aurelia by Sonneborn, macronuclear regeneration (MR) in ciliates is now well established. Senescence, immaturity (Haga & Hiwatashi, 1981) and rejuvenation have entered the panorama of conjugation and autogamy even since Maupas in 1889. See Smith-Sonnenborn (1979) on aging. A week ago, I made the mistake of writing that MR was not convincing, corrected now after reading Kloetzel on Euplotes aediculatus and Kimura & Mikami on Paramecium caudatum. If the initiating macronucleus (MA) is damaged or missing,, a MA fragment of the old MA can replace it as a form of life insurance. Kloetzel used a UV microbeam and Kimura & Mikami used microsurgery to inactivate the anlagen and induce MR from fragments. Ciliates are multinucleate cells that contain macronuclei and micronuclei. The nuclear contents often change after meiosis. Crossing over, various segregations and hybridizations often involving allopolyploidy are still poorly understood. Exconjugant cells have maternal MA fragments, newly initiated MA and micronuclei (MI). The maternal macronucleus of P. caudatum is retained for long periods such as four cell cycles in some species and can continue to influence development. However after a few cycles, the presence of the new MA anlage suppresses the synthesis of DNA by the maternal fragments that then become pycnotic. Then MA fragmentation might begin with fertilization or later followed by MR followed by DNA inhibition in fragments and then their digestion. See Kimura & Mikami (2003). Without a new MA, the old one is regenerated, at least in both P. caudatum and Euplotes aediculatus. Sending a genetic signal through the cytoplasm from an anlage to a fragment is a miracle indeed. Is this one a somatic segregation ? Such a signal was assumed to originate in the MI-controlled synkaryon as MIs and MAs so segregate from it. That is the MIs from the synkaryon segregate into MIs and MA anlagen. See also Cole & Siegel (1969) leading to Chen on allopolyploidy in P. bursaria. When ciliates say Make 4 MI, they might only need one. If the processes of meiosis and allopolyploidy are accidentally mixed, one result can be a new species in one jump though the common result leads to death. Ciliates are, by the precautions they take, trying to hold on to the status quo including of course their ploidy status. It is indicated by the volume of the MI. Segregations in the sense of being only related to crossingover in classic meiosis cannot explain all of the events during the Maupasian rejuvenation allowed by conjugation--promoted by sexual exchange. Other necessary references follow. Allen, Genetics (1967) 55: 797-822 Berger, Chromosome (1973) 44: 33-48, J. Protozool (1974) 21: 145-152 Cole & Siegel, (1969) Genetics 63: 361-368 Diller, J Morph (1965) 116: 51-64 Fidler, Jayaraman & Kloetzel, J Protozool (1985) 32: 429-438 Haga & Hiwatashi, Nature (1981) 289: 177–179. Katashima, J Sci Hiroshima Univ Ser B Div 1 (1959) 18: 99-107; 1971, 23: 59-93 Kimura & Mikami, Differentiation (2003) 71: 337–345 Kloetzel, Develop Biol (1981) 83: 20-32 Lipps, Arch Protistenkd 116: 106-131 Mikami, Chromosoma (1979) 73: 131-142, Dev Biol (1987) 123: 161–168, J Protozool (1975) 22: 536-540 Raikov, In Research in Protozoology, 1968, Ed. TT Chen, Vol 3, Pergamon, New York Smith-Sonneborn, Science (1979) 203: 1115-1117. Sonneborn, Anat Rec (1940) 78: 53–54. Dr Paul R Earl Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas Universidad de Nuevo León San Nicolás, NL, 66451 Mexico From dawn At stantonwrites.com Thu Nov 16 16:26:52 2006 From: dawn At stantonwrites.com (dawn@stantonwrites.com) Date: Fri Nov 17 08:01:34 2006 Subject: [Protista] Seeking research on entomopathogens Message-ID: <3475.66.108.42.123.1163712412.squirrel@www.stantonwrites.com> I'm currently a graduate student at Portland State University working on a literary nonfiction thesis about butterflies. (Science writing for a general audience.) Throughout my thesis one of the themes I'm exploring is what butterflies and humans have in common. In the chapter I'm currently researching, I'm focusing on entomopathology, particularly things that attack Lepidopteran larvae in diapause (in the field as well as in an artifical environment such as a Petri dish). If anyone is doing research in this field that they'd be willing to share with me, I'd be grateful. I can be contacted at dawn@stantonwrites.com. Best regards, Dawn Stanton