Abstract
Symbiotic dinoflagellate algae (Symbiodinium sp.) isolated from the scleractinian coral Plesiastrea versipora and incubated in homogenized host tissue released 4 to 7 times as much glycerol (14 to 46 nmol glycerol/106 algae) as those incubated in seawater (3 to 6 nmol glycerol/106 algae) after 4 h incubation in the light. During this period, no release of triglycerides was detected. Intracellular glycerol increased 2- to 3-fold in algae incubated in host homogenate, but remained unchanged in algae incubated in seawater at a concentration of 0.82 ± 0.47 nmol glycerol/106 algae. In each incubation condition, intracellular triglyceride levels increased. However, in algae incubated in host homogenate, the intracellular levels of triglycerides reached only about 75% of the amount reached in algae incubated in seawater (max. 18.55 ± 2.40 nmol glycerol/106 cells). Host homogenate did not stimulate the release of glycerol from algae during dark incubation. These data show that the glycerol released by algae incubated in host-tissue homogenate was derived from increased synthesis of glycerol or from diversion of some glycerol or other photosynthetic intermediates from incorporation into algal triglyceride stores, and did not come from existing stores.
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