4.1 Article

The role of GlsA in the evolution of asymmetric cell division in the green alga Volvox caiteri

Journal

DEVELOPMENT GENES AND EVOLUTION
Volume 213, Issue 7, Pages 328-335

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00427-003-0332-x

Keywords

asymmetric cell division; cell fate; Chlamydomonas; Volvox

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Volvox carteri, a green alga in the order Volvocales, contains two completely differentiated cell types, small motile somatic cells and large reproductive cells called gonidia, that are set apart from each other during embryogenesis by a series of visibly asymmetric cell divisions. Mutational analysis has revealed a class of genes (gonidialess, gls) that are required specifically for asymmetric divisions in V. carteri, but that are dispensable for symmetric divisions. Previously we cloned one of these genes, glsA, and showed that it encodes a chaperone-like protein (G1sA) that has close orthologs in a diverse set of eukaryotes, ranging from fungi to vertebrates and higher plants. In the present study we set out to explore the role of glsA in the evolution of asymmetric division in the volvocine algae by cloning and characterizing a glsA ortholog from one of the simplest members of the group, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which does not undergo asymmetric divisions. This ortholog (which we have named gar1, for glsA related) is predicted to encode a protein that is 70% identical to G1sA overall, and that is most closely related to G1sA in the same domains that are most highly conserved between G1sA and its other known orthologs. We report that a gar1 transgene fully complements the glsA mutation in V. carteri, a result that suggests that asymmetric division probably arose through the modification of a gene whose product interacts with G1sA, but not through a modification of glsA itself.

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