2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.tim.2021.06.007
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Phenotypic plasticity through disposable genetic adaptation in ciliates

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 89 publications
(116 reference statements)
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“…In our system, sex may have immediate and strong fitness consequences due to the nuclear dimorphism typical of all ciliates. Aside from creating novel genetic variants (in the germline micronucleus), sexual reproduction also involves the recreation of a new somatic macronucleus and thereby the loss of any (somatic) adaptation acquired during asexual life (44).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our system, sex may have immediate and strong fitness consequences due to the nuclear dimorphism typical of all ciliates. Aside from creating novel genetic variants (in the germline micronucleus), sexual reproduction also involves the recreation of a new somatic macronucleus and thereby the loss of any (somatic) adaptation acquired during asexual life (44).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Those cells belonging to the same developed MAC offer high methodological facility (no need to separate MICs from MACs) and statistical power (all mutations are de facto MAC- de novo -SNPs) to estimate the time since the last sexual event, and thus the duration of asexual phase in nature. Although sexual reproduction is supposed to be frequent in natural populations of T. thermophila [62], its influence on population’s persistence relative to somatic selection during asexual phases is largely unknown [30]. Other eco-evolutionary perspectives would be to barcode tetrahymine cells issued from different environments using both SNPs and distribution of indels at MDS junctions to link fitness advantages (for instance better competitive or dispersal abilities) to these different sources of genomic variations.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case of T. thermophila (∼45n), the latter implies that, in the absence of selection, each cell lineage fixes 99% of its loci in ∼200 asexual generations. Amitosis offers an unusual panel of somatic genomic variants on which selection can act at each asexual generation [30]. For instance, in the presence of toxic cadmium ions, both chromosome copy number variation and paralogous expansion of metallothionein have been observed in T. thermophila in a few asexual generations [31].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For instance, in the presence of toxic cadmium ions, both chromosome copy number variation and paralogous expansion of metallothionein have been observed in T. thermophila in a few asexual generations [31]. The evolutionary origin of this somatic genome remains unclear but a role in the domestication of transposable elements [32][33][34], as well as a role in phenotypic plasticity through somatic selection [30], have been proposed. Several ciliate MAC reference genomes have been published, including of species of the genera Tetrahymena [35], Paramecium [29,36], Oxytricha [37] or the heterotrichean Stentor [38].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%