Abstract

Tetrahymena thermophila transforms from a pyriform-shaped trophic form to an elongate rapidly swimming, dispersal form under the appropriate conditions of starvation [Nelsen, E. M., and DeBault, L. E. (1978). J. Protozool. 25, 113–119] . The development and control of the dispersal phenotype are examined. After an initial starvation period, the cell replaces its oral structures. During oral replacement, a caudal cilium emerges at the posterior end of the cell. As oral replacement is completed, the cell becomes spindle shaped and the newly-formed oral membranelles are positioned beneath the surface of the cell with somatic ciliary rows exterior to them. The spindle-shaped cell then elongates to become the dispersal form. While the cell is developing the new oral structures, it is also drastically increasing its numbers of somatic basal bodies and cilia. The events in the transformation pathway may be arrested or reversed by feeding the cell, except that once oral replacement has begun, it is completed along with an associated streamlining of the cell. Refed cells revert to the normal vegetative phenotype, except that some shape changes persist for several hours, suggesting that they are compatible with, but independent of, growth. Blockage of protein synthesis with cycloheximide prevents all changes associated with transformation, including the shape changes and elongation of the caudal cilium. The relation between transformation and conjugation has also been examined. Less transformation takes place when mating is possible, but transformed cells may also mate.

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