Title: THE FLAGELLAR DEVELOPMENT CYCLE OF THE UNIFLAGELLATE <i>PELAGOMONAS CALCEOLATA</i> (PELAGOPHYCEAE)<sup>1</sup>
Abstract: ABSTRACT Vegetative cells of Pelagomonas calceolata Andersen & Saunders were confirmed to possess a reduced flagellar apparatus, consisting of a single basal body/flagellum that is not accompanied by either flagellar roots or a barren basal body. Just prior to division, the parental flagellum retracts (or is abscised) as two new basal bodies/flagella arise de novo. During cytokinesis the parental basal body segregates with a new basal body/flagellum, briefly producing a progeny cell typical of other known uniflagellates (i.e. containing a basal body/flagellum and accompanying barren basal body). The parental basal body then disintegrates or “transforms” out of existence, leaving both progeny cells with a single basal body/flagellum (i.e. neither progeny cell possesses any vestige of a mature flagellum/basal body ). Pelagomonas calceolata belongs to a lineage of chromophyte algae characterized by having a reduced flagellar apparatus, but it is the only known species, not only in this lineage but among all eukaryotes, to have undergone the complete elimination of the mature flagellum /basal body .
Publication Year: 1995
Publication Date: 1995-08-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 8
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