Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.

Modern green algae constitute a large and diverse taxonomic assemblage that encompasses many multicellular phenotypes including colonial, filamentous and parenchymatous forms. In all multicellular green algae, each cell is surrounded by an extracellular matrix, most often in the form of a cell wall....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: David S. Domozych, Catherine E. Domozych
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00649/full
id doaj-3a5f456028a342a6acc1152e77d0e2b9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3a5f456028a342a6acc1152e77d0e2b92020-11-25T01:10:11ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2014-11-01510.3389/fpls.2014.00649120300Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.David S. Domozych0Catherine E. Domozych1Skidmore CollegeSkidmore CollegeModern green algae constitute a large and diverse taxonomic assemblage that encompasses many multicellular phenotypes including colonial, filamentous and parenchymatous forms. In all multicellular green algae, each cell is surrounded by an extracellular matrix, most often in the form of a cell wall. Volvocalean taxa like Volvox have an elaborate, gel-like, hydroxyproline rich glycoprotein covering that contains the cells of the colony. In ulvophytes, uronic acid-rich and sulfated polysaccharides are the likely adhesion agents that maintain the multicellular habit. Charophytes also produce polysaccharide-rich cell walls and in late divergent taxa, pectin plays a critical role in cell-adhesion in the multicellular complex. Cell walls are products of coordinated interaction of membrane trafficking, cytoskeletal dynamics and the cell’s signal transduction machinery responding both to precise internal clocks and external environmental cues. Most often, these activities must be synchronized with the secretion, deposition and remodeling of the polymers of the extracellular matrix. Rapid advances in molecular genetics, cell biology and cell wall biochemistry of green algae will soon provide new insights into the evolution and subcellular processes leading to multicellularity.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00649/fullCell WallCytokinesisExtracellular Matrixpectinglycoproteinmulticellularity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David S. Domozych
Catherine E. Domozych
spellingShingle David S. Domozych
Catherine E. Domozych
Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.
Frontiers in Plant Science
Cell Wall
Cytokinesis
Extracellular Matrix
pectin
glycoprotein
multicellularity
author_facet David S. Domozych
Catherine E. Domozych
author_sort David S. Domozych
title Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.
title_short Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.
title_full Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.
title_fullStr Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.
title_full_unstemmed Multicellularity in green algae: Upsizing in a walled complex.
title_sort multicellularity in green algae: upsizing in a walled complex.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Modern green algae constitute a large and diverse taxonomic assemblage that encompasses many multicellular phenotypes including colonial, filamentous and parenchymatous forms. In all multicellular green algae, each cell is surrounded by an extracellular matrix, most often in the form of a cell wall. Volvocalean taxa like Volvox have an elaborate, gel-like, hydroxyproline rich glycoprotein covering that contains the cells of the colony. In ulvophytes, uronic acid-rich and sulfated polysaccharides are the likely adhesion agents that maintain the multicellular habit. Charophytes also produce polysaccharide-rich cell walls and in late divergent taxa, pectin plays a critical role in cell-adhesion in the multicellular complex. Cell walls are products of coordinated interaction of membrane trafficking, cytoskeletal dynamics and the cell’s signal transduction machinery responding both to precise internal clocks and external environmental cues. Most often, these activities must be synchronized with the secretion, deposition and remodeling of the polymers of the extracellular matrix. Rapid advances in molecular genetics, cell biology and cell wall biochemistry of green algae will soon provide new insights into the evolution and subcellular processes leading to multicellularity.
topic Cell Wall
Cytokinesis
Extracellular Matrix
pectin
glycoprotein
multicellularity
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00649/full
work_keys_str_mv AT davidsdomozych multicellularityingreenalgaeupsizinginawalledcomplex
AT catherineedomozych multicellularityingreenalgaeupsizinginawalledcomplex
_version_ 1725176388711874560