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Differential gene expression analysis and cytological evidence reveal a sexual stage of an amoeba with multiparental cellular and nuclear fusion
Author(s) -
Yonas I. Tekle,
Fang Wang,
Alireza Heidari,
Alanna Johnson Stewart
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0235725
Subject(s) - amoeba (genus) , biology , gene expression , cell fusion , regulation of gene expression , cell nucleus , fusion gene , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , stage (stratigraphy) , computational biology , genetics , cell , paleontology
Sex is a hallmark of eukaryotes but its evolution in microbial eukaryotes is poorly elucidated. Recent genomic studies revealed microbial eukaryotes possess a genetic toolkit necessary for sexual reproduction. However, the mechanism of sexual development in a majority of microbial eukaryotes including amoebozoans is poorly characterized. The major hurdle in studying sex in microbial eukaryotes is a lack of observational evidence, primarily due to its cryptic nature. In this study, we used a tractable fusing amoeba, Cochliopodium , to investigate sexual development using stage-specific Differential Gene Expression (DGE) and cytological analyses. Both DGE and cytological results showed that most of the meiosis and sex-related genes are upregulated in Cochliopodium undergoing fusion in laboratory culture. Relative gene ontology (GO) category representations in unfused and fused cells revealed a functional skew of the fused transcriptome toward DNA metabolism, nucleus and ligases that are suggestive of a commitment to sexual development. However, the GO categories of unfused cells were dominated by metabolic pathways and other processes indicative of a vegetative phase. Our study provides strong evidence that the fused cells represent a sexual stage in Cochliopodium . Our findings have further implications in understanding the evolution and mechanism of inheritance involving multiparents in other eukaryotes with a similar reproductive strategy.

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