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Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates

Sexuality in the marine araphid diatom Tabularia involves an unusual type of gamete, not only among diatoms but possibly in all of nature. The non-flagellated male gamete is free and vigorously motile, propelled by pseudopodia. However, the cues (if any) in their search for compatible female gametes...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Edgar, Robyn, Drolet, David, Ehrman, James M., Kaczmarska, Irena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4081721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24991803
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101767
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author Edgar, Robyn
Drolet, David
Ehrman, James M.
Kaczmarska, Irena
author_facet Edgar, Robyn
Drolet, David
Ehrman, James M.
Kaczmarska, Irena
author_sort Edgar, Robyn
collection PubMed
description Sexuality in the marine araphid diatom Tabularia involves an unusual type of gamete, not only among diatoms but possibly in all of nature. The non-flagellated male gamete is free and vigorously motile, propelled by pseudopodia. However, the cues (if any) in their search for compatible female gametes and the general search patterns to locate them are unknown. We tracked and compared male gamete movements in the presence and absence of receptive female gametes. Path linearity of male movement was not affected by presence of female gametes. Male gametes did not move towards female gametes regardless of their proximity to each other, suggesting that the detection range for a compatible mate is very small compared to known algal examples (mostly spermatozoids) and that mate recognition requires (near) contact with a female gamete. We therefore investigated how male gametes move to bring insight into their search strategy and found that it was consistent with the predictions of a random-walk model with changes in direction coming from an even distribution. We further investigated the type of random walk by determining the best-fit distribution on the tail of the move length distribution and found it to be consistent with a truncated power law distribution with an exponent of 2.34. Although consistent with a Lévy walk search pattern, the range of move lengths in the tail was too narrow for Lévy properties to emerge and so would be best described as Brownian motion. This is somewhat surprising because female gametes were often outnumbered by male gametes, thus contrary to the assumption that a Brownian search mode may be most optimal with an abundant target resource. This is also the first mathematically analysed search pattern of a non-flagellated protistan gamete, supporting the notion that principles of Brownian motion have wide application in biology.
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spelling pubmed-40817212014-07-10 Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates Edgar, Robyn Drolet, David Ehrman, James M. Kaczmarska, Irena PLoS One Research Article Sexuality in the marine araphid diatom Tabularia involves an unusual type of gamete, not only among diatoms but possibly in all of nature. The non-flagellated male gamete is free and vigorously motile, propelled by pseudopodia. However, the cues (if any) in their search for compatible female gametes and the general search patterns to locate them are unknown. We tracked and compared male gamete movements in the presence and absence of receptive female gametes. Path linearity of male movement was not affected by presence of female gametes. Male gametes did not move towards female gametes regardless of their proximity to each other, suggesting that the detection range for a compatible mate is very small compared to known algal examples (mostly spermatozoids) and that mate recognition requires (near) contact with a female gamete. We therefore investigated how male gametes move to bring insight into their search strategy and found that it was consistent with the predictions of a random-walk model with changes in direction coming from an even distribution. We further investigated the type of random walk by determining the best-fit distribution on the tail of the move length distribution and found it to be consistent with a truncated power law distribution with an exponent of 2.34. Although consistent with a Lévy walk search pattern, the range of move lengths in the tail was too narrow for Lévy properties to emerge and so would be best described as Brownian motion. This is somewhat surprising because female gametes were often outnumbered by male gametes, thus contrary to the assumption that a Brownian search mode may be most optimal with an abundant target resource. This is also the first mathematically analysed search pattern of a non-flagellated protistan gamete, supporting the notion that principles of Brownian motion have wide application in biology. Public Library of Science 2014-07-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4081721/ /pubmed/24991803 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101767 Text en © 2014 Edgar et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Edgar, Robyn
Drolet, David
Ehrman, James M.
Kaczmarska, Irena
Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates
title Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates
title_full Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates
title_fullStr Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates
title_full_unstemmed Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates
title_short Motile Male Gametes of the Araphid Diatom Tabularia fasciculata Search Randomly for Mates
title_sort motile male gametes of the araphid diatom tabularia fasciculata search randomly for mates
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4081721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24991803
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101767
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