Growth and electron microscopic studies on an experimentally established bacterial endosymbiosis in amoebae
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Cellular Physiology
- Vol. 98 (1) , 49-57
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1040980107
Abstract
A strain of nonsymbiotic A. proteus was infected with endosymbiotic bacteria isolated from another strain of amoeba which had become dependent on the symbionts after a few years of spontaneously established symbiosis. In the newly infected amoebae, the bacteria avoided digestion and multiplied at a faster rate than the hosts, reaching the maximum carrying number (about 42,000 per amoeba) in fewer than ten cell generations of the hosts. The experimentally infected amoebae were also examined under the electron microscope, and the development of bacteria‐containing vesicles was followed. The results show that the infective bacteria that were initially harmful to host amoebae have become harmless and that they have changed in their mode of multiplication during the course of establishing a stable symbiosis with their hosts.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temperature Sensitivity: A Cell Character Determined by Obligate Endosymbionts in AmoebasScience, 1978
- Effect of Chloramphenicol on Bacterial Endosymbiotes in a Strain of Amoeba proteus*The Journal of Protozoology, 1977
- Endosymbiosis in amoebae: Recently established endosymbionts have become required cytoplasmic componentsJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1976
- Cytoplasmic filaments and cellular wound healing in amoeba proteusThe Journal of cell biology, 1975
- Reduced Growth of Blastocrithidia culicis and Crithidia oncopelti Freed of Intracellular Symbiotes by Chloramphenicol*The Journal of Protozoology, 1975
- II. IMPLICATIONS AND EXTENSIONS OF THE SERIAL ENDOSYMBIOSIS THEORY OF THE ORIGIN OF EUKARYOTESTaxon, 1974
- Development of Cellular Dependence on Infective Organisms: Micrurgical Studies in AmoebasScience, 1972
- RESPONSE OF CULTURED MACROPHAGES TO MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS, WITH OBSERVATIONS ON FUSION OF LYSOSOMES WITH PHAGOSOMESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1971
- Unusual intra-cellular bacterial infection in large, free-living amoebaeExperimental Cell Research, 1967
- Chemotaxis in large, free-living amoebaeExperimental Cell Research, 1965