HYDRA VIRIDIS: TRANSFER OF METABOLITES BETWEENHYDRAAND SYMBIOTIC ALGAE
Open Access
- 1 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Biological Bulletin
- Vol. 160 (1) , 175-188
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1540911
Abstract
Back transfer of metabolites from food to endosymbiotic algae in the digestive cells of H. viridis was demonstrated. Brine shrimp nauplii labeled with tritiated precursors of protein and nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) were fed to light and dark grown hydras. The fate of the label after a single feeding with radioactive material in hydra and algal fractions was followed by scintillation counting and autoradiographic techniques. Labeled thymidine was incorporated into DNA in both light- and dark-grown hydras. Although the symbiosis persists indefinitely in hydras in darkness (7-10 days), the number of algae per cell is reduced. Tritiated orotic acid and tritiated uridine, RNA precursors, were incorporated into the RNA fraction of hydra cells and algae. Tritiated leucine was incorporated into peptides and proteins, and to a lesser extent into simple sugars, oligosaccharides, and oligonucleotides in hydra and algal fractions. The metabolites of the brine shrimp food are available to both partners. A decrease over time in label introduced as 3H-orotic acid and 3H-uridine and incorporated into hydra RNA is compensated for by an increase in label in the algae, implying competition for constant quantities of metabolites from the single feeding. Although food availability, light, number of algae per cell and other factors influence the quantity and rate of nutrient transfer between the partners, in both light- and dark-grown hydras the amount of back transfer of metabolites to the symbiotic algae is impressive.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
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