{"id":2680,"date":"2014-07-25T13:38:56","date_gmt":"2014-07-25T05:38:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.leadingtec.cn\/?p=2680"},"modified":"2014-07-25T13:38:56","modified_gmt":"2014-07-25T05:38:56","slug":"algae-discovery-reveals-origin-of-sexes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.leadingtec.cn\/algae-discovery-reveals-origin-of-sexes.html","title":{"rendered":"Algae discovery reveals origin of sexes"},"content":{"rendered":"
July 14, 2014<\/em> <\/a><\/p>\n recent discovery in the multicellular green alga, Volvox carteri<\/em>,has revealed the origin of male and female sexes, showing how they evolved from a more primitive mating system in a unicellular relative.<\/p>\n A team of scientists led by James Umen, Ph.D<\/a>., associate member, Enterprise Institute for Renewable Fuels at the Danforth Plant Science Center, identified the master regulatory gene for sex determination in Volvox <\/em>and found that it has acquired new functions compared to a related gene in its close relative, the unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii<\/em> which does not have dimorphic sexes.\u00a0Their findings, published on July 8, 2014 in PLOS Biology<\/em><\/a>, also provide a possible blueprint for how sexes in other multicellular organisms like plants and animals may have originated.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n For plants and animals having male and female reproductive cells or gametes is the norm, and the differences between the two types of gametes are obvious.\u00a0Male gametes are small motile sperm or pollen, while female gametes are large egg cells. However, the evolutionary origins of male and female sexes are unclear because the distant unicellular relatives of plants, animals and other multicellular species generally don\u2019t have distinct sexes, but instead have mating types \u2013 a system in which gametes of one mating type can only fuse with those with a different mating type, but the cells of each mating type are indistinguishable from each other in size and morphology.<\/p>\n Unlike the case in plants and animals whose unicellular ancestors are very distantly related, male and female sexes in Volvox<\/em> evolved relatively recently from mating types in an ancestor that was similar to Chlamydomonas<\/em>. Based on a previous study published in Science<\/em><\/a>, Umen and co-workers, postdoctoral fellows Sa Geng and Peter DeHoff, had identified a gene in Volvox<\/em> males called MID<\/em> whose counterpart in Chlamydomonas<\/em> was known to control differentiation of its two mating types called \u201cplus<\/em>\u201d and \u201cminus.<\/em>\u201d<\/p>\n
\nAlgaeIndustryMagazine.com<\/a><\/p>\n