Abstract
BackgroundSolar-powered sea slugs are famed for their ability to survive starvation due to incorporated algal chloroplasts. It is well established that algal-derived carbon can be traced in numerous slug-derived compounds, showing that slugs utilize the photosynthates produced by incorporated plastids. Recently, a new hypothesis suggests that the photosynthates produced are not continuously made available to the slug. Instead, at least some of the plastid’s photosynthetic products are stored in the plastid itself and only later become available to the slug. The long-term plastid-retaining slug, Elysia timida and its sole food source, Acetabularia acetabulum were examined to determine whether or not starch, a combination of amylose and amylopectin and the main photosynthate produced by A. acetabulum, is produced by the stolen plastids and whether it accumulates within individual kleptoplasts, providing an energy larder, made available to the slug at a later time.ResultsHistological sections of Elysia timida throughout a starvation period were stained with Lugol’s Iodine solution, a well-known stain for starch granules in plants. We present here for the first time, an increase in amylose concentration, within the slug’s digestive gland cells during a starvation period, followed by a sharp decrease. Chemically blocking photosynthesis in these tissues resulted in no observable starch, indicating that the starch in untreated animals is a product of photosynthetic activity.ConclusionThis suggests that kleptoplasts function as both, a nutritive producer and storage device, holding onto the polysaccharides they produce for a certain time until they are finally available and used by the starving slug to withstand extended starvation periods.
Highlights
Solar-powered sea slugs are famed for their ability to survive starvation due to incorporated algal chloroplasts
We examine the accumulation of starch within kleptoplasts in the digestive gland tubules of stenophagous, long-term plastid retaining (LtR) Elysia timida
Pulse Amplitude Modulated (PAM) values were measured for specimens treated with the photosynthetic inhibitor Monolinuron – diluted to 2 μg.ml-1 with filtered seawater, in order to determine if photosynthesis was still occurring in the slugs and how it decreased with the continuous presence of the blocker
Summary
Solar-powered sea slugs are famed for their ability to survive starvation due to incorporated algal chloroplasts. It is well established that algal-derived carbon can be traced in numerous slug-derived compounds, showing that slugs utilize the photosynthates produced by incorporated plastids. Sacoglossan sea slugs (Heterobranchia: Gastropoda) are known as “solar-powered sea slugs” and “leaves that crawl” due to some members’ ability to steal chloroplasts (kleptoplasts) from their algal food and retain them for many months [1,2,3,4,5]. To establish whether or not photosynthates are made available to a sacoglossan slug, radiolabeling studies with 14C or 13C were conducted [5, 14,15,16,17,18,19], finding that both photosynthetically and heterotrophically fixed carbon is present in multiple slug-derived compounds for some species.
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