iScience (Nov 2020)

Quorum Sensing Behavior in the Model Unicellular Eukaryote Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

  • Alexandra M. Folcik,
  • Kirstin Cutshaw,
  • Timothy Haire,
  • Joseph Goode,
  • Pooja Shah,
  • Faizan Zaidi,
  • Brianna Richardson,
  • Andrew Palmer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 11
p. 101714

Abstract

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Summary: Microbial communities display behavioral changes in response to variable environmental conditions. In some bacteria, motility increases as a function of cell density, allowing for population dispersal before the onset of nutrient scarcity. Utilizing automated particle tracking, we now report on a population-dependent increase in the swimming speeds of the photosynthetic unicellular eukaryotes Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and C. moewussi. Our findings confirm that this acceleration in swimming speed arises as a function of culture density, rather than with age and/or nutrient availability. Furthermore, this phenomenon depends on the synthesis and detection of a low-molecular-weight compound which can be transferred between cultures and stimulates comparable effects across both species, supporting the existence of a conserved phenomenon, not unlike bacterial quorum sensing, among members of this genus. The potential expansion of density-dependent phenomena to a new group of unicellular eukaryotes provides important insight into how microbial populations evolve and regulate “social” behaviors.

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