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Full-Text Articles in Molecular Biology

Evolutionary Expansions And Neofunctionalization Of Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors In Cnidaria, Ellen G. Dow Jun 2019

Evolutionary Expansions And Neofunctionalization Of Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors In Cnidaria, Ellen G. Dow

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Reef ecosystems are composed of a variety of organisms, transient species of fish and invertebrates, microscopic bacteria and viruses, and structural organisms that build the living foundation, coral. Sessile cnidarians, corals and anemones, interpret dynamic environments of organisms and abiotic factors through a molecular interface. Recognition of foreign molecules occurs through innate immunity via receptors identifying conserved molecular patterns. Similarly, chemosensory receptors monitor the environment through specific ligands. Chemosensory receptors include ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs), transmembrane ion channels involved in chemical sensing and neural signal transduction. Recently, an iGluR homolog was implicated in cnidarian immunological resistance to recurrent infections of …


Co-Cultures Of Oophila Amblystomatis Between Ambystoma Maculatum And Ambystoma Gracile Hosts Show Host-Symbiont Fidelity, Ryan R. Kerney, Jasper S. Leavitt, Elizabeth M. Hill, Huanjia Zhang, Eunsoo Kim, John Burns Jan 2019

Co-Cultures Of Oophila Amblystomatis Between Ambystoma Maculatum And Ambystoma Gracile Hosts Show Host-Symbiont Fidelity, Ryan R. Kerney, Jasper S. Leavitt, Elizabeth M. Hill, Huanjia Zhang, Eunsoo Kim, John Burns

Biology Faculty Publications

A unique symbiosis occurs between embryos of the spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum) and a green alga (Oophila amblystomatis). Unlike most vertebrate host-symbiont relationships, which are ectosymbiotic, A. maculatum exhibits both an ecto- and an endo-symbiosis, where some of the green algal cells living inside egg capsules enter embryonic tissues as well as individual salamander cells. Past research has consistently categorized this symbiosis as a mutualism, making this the first example of a “beneficial” microbe entering vertebrate cells. Another closely related species of salamander, Ambystoma gracile, also harbors beneficial Oophila algae in its egg capsules. However, our …