Electric shock can create parabiotic fusions of living Tetrahymena cells. In this study, cells were mated and successful pairs were electrofused with either vegetatively growing cells or other mating pairs. In particular, we electrofused pairs from normal [diploid × diploid] matings with vegetatively dividing cells in G- or M-phase of the cell cycle. We also fused [diploid × diploid] conjugants with mating pairs involving an aneuploid partner [diploid × “star”], which typically undergo an abortive conjugal pathway termed genomic exclusion. Using such parabiotic fusions we identified and characterized two developmentally critical landmarks: 1) the “abort” signal, which is initiated in pairs with nuclear defects (this first becomes evident soon after the completion of Meiosis I or the beginning of Meiosis II); and 2) the “terminal commitment point”, a developmental stage in normal [diploid × diploid] pairs after which conjugation no longer responds to a parabiotically transmitted abort signal (this correlates with the onset of the second postzygotic nuclear division). Finally we demonstrate that a conjugal-arrest-activity varies with the vegetative cell cycle, reaching its highest level of activity during M-phase and dropping just after cytokinesis.
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1 May 2001
Development in Electrofused Conjugants of Tetrahymena thermophila
ERIC S. COLE,
MARK A. VIRTUE,
KATHLEEN R. STUART
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The Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology
Vol. 48 • No. 3
May 2001
Vol. 48 • No. 3
May 2001
cell cycle
Ciliates
Conjugation
electrofusion
genomic exclusion
meiosis
mitosis