Monday, July 06, 2009

Byte Size Biology � From predator to plant in one gulp

Byte Size Biology � From predator to plant in one gulp: "Two researchers have shown a striking example of�� endosymbiosis forming� now:� in 2005 Noriko Okamoto an� Isao Inouye reported on a unicellular organism called Hatena. Hatena (”enigma” in Japanese) leads a curious life cycle. Hatena is a single-cell organism, swimming around in the water, using a little feeding apparatus to eat cells and organic material smaller than itself.� At some point, it would feed on another unicellular algae, the Nephroselmis. Once Hatena swallows Nephroselmis, it does not digest it. Rather, Nephrosolmis makes a rather comfortable home inside Hatena. Actually, the algae starts growing inside Hatena: it grows to about 10 times its original size, filling up most of Hatena. The alga also seems to lose most of its own organelles, except for the chloroplast. The chloroplast actually grows bigger."

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home