Autonomous and non-autonomous traits mediate social cooperation in Dictyostelium discoideum


Autoria(s): Mujumdar, Nameeta; Dubey, Ashvini Kumar; Nandimath, Krithi; Nanjundiah, Vidyanand
Data(s)

01/08/2011

Resumo

In the trishanku (triA(-)) mutant of the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, aggregates are smaller than usual and the spore mass is located mid-way up the stalk, not at the apex. We have monitored aggregate territory size, spore allocation and fruiting body morphology in chimaeric groups of (quasi-wild-type) Ax2 and triA(-) cells. Developmental canalisation breaks down in chimaeras and leads to an increase in phenotypic variation. A minority of triA(-) cells causes largely Ax2 aggregation streams to break up; the effect is not due to the counting factor. Most chimaeric fruiting bodies resemble those of Ax2 or triA(-). Others are double-deckers with a single stalk and two spore masses, one each at the terminus and midway along the stalk. The relative number of spores belonging to the two genotypes depends both on the mixing ratio and on the fruiting body morphology. In double-deckers formed from 1:1 chimaeras, the upper spore mass has more Ax2 spores, and the lower spore mass more triA(-) spores, than expected. Thus, the traits under study depend partly on the cells' own genotype and partly on the phenotypes, and so genotypes, of other cells: they are both autonomous and non-autonomous. These findings strengthen the parallels between multicellular development and behaviour in social groups. Besides that, they reinforce the point that a trait can be associated with a genotype only in a specified context.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/40457/1/Autonomous.pdf

Mujumdar, Nameeta and Dubey, Ashvini Kumar and Nandimath, Krithi and Nanjundiah, Vidyanand (2011) Autonomous and non-autonomous traits mediate social cooperation in Dictyostelium discoideum. In: Journal of Biosciences, 36 (3, SI). pp. 505-516.

Publicador

Indian Academy of Sciences

Relação

http://www.springerlink.com/content/61728kk2j08285n1/

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/40457/

Palavras-Chave #Centre for Ecological Sciences #Molecular Reproduction, Development & Genetics (formed by the merger of DBGL and CRBME)
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed