Social behaviour is defined as the interaction between two or more individuals of the same species and includes “all behavior that tends to bring individuals together” (Whishaw et al., 2006).… Click to show full abstract
Social behaviour is defined as the interaction between two or more individuals of the same species and includes “all behavior that tends to bring individuals together” (Whishaw et al., 2006). Unicellular organisms can be highly social, frequently forming structured groups and expressing collective behaviour. For example, bacteria are capable of quorum sensing, a mechanism by which cells communicate to sense population density (Miller and Bassler, 2001). In a more unique example, the Gram-negative bacteria Myxococcus xanthus expresses cooperative feeding by hunting for food in swarms and forms fruiting bodies upon starvation (Dworkin and Kaiser, 1985). Microorganisms can also socialize by forming cell aggregates, such as biofilms attached to surfaces (Stoodley et al., 2002) or surface-free aggregates (Cai, 2020) in response to changes in environmental conditions. Among eukaryotic organisms, unicellular algae also form cell aggregates. The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii), an important model for the study of modern photosynthetic organisms and the evolution of land plants, forms aggregates in response to factors such as predation, changes in pH, exposure to chemicals, and nutritional needs (Herron et al., 2019). Chlamydomonas can form several different types of aggregates. Palmelloids, for example, are small groups of 4–16 cells that form in response to exposure to organic acids (Iwasa and Murakami, 1968) and are the product of incomplete clonal divisions. Other small Chlamydomonas cell aggregates have also been described, including gloeocapsoids that resemble the structures of cyanobacteria of the genera Gloeocapsa and Gloeothece (Krespach et al., 2021). Larger Chlamydomonas cell aggregates consisting of ten to more than thousands of cells have also been identified after exposure to some abiotic stressors. These larger aggregates differ from palmelloids in that they form from differentiated cells that can be genetically heterogeneous (Sathe and Durand, 2016). In this issue of Plant Physiology, de Carpentier et al. (2022) use reverse genetics together with a multiomics approach to determine the genetic processes behind large cell aggregation in Chlamydomonas responding to abiotic stress. The authors constructed a library of insertional mutants and identified six Chlamydomonas mutant lines with the ability to spontaneously form cell aggregates: the socializer (saz) mutants. The saz1 mutant locus was in the Cre01.g049950 gene that encodes the vegetative lytic enzyme. By growing cultures of saz1 with a Chlamydomonas line expressing a yellow fluorescence protein (mVenus), the authors demonstrated that the aggregates formed can be genetically heterogeneous, as opposed to clonally formed (i.e. cells of both the saz1 mutant and the mVenus line were found together in a single aggregate). The saz1 mutants were more tolerant to abiotic stresses, including heat shock, and an extracellular matrix resembling that of bacterial biofilms was readily visible surrounding the aggregates. To identify the specific genes and proteins that underlie aggregation behaviour, the authors tested the media in which the saz1 mutants had been growing. The authors reported that media isolated from actively growing saz1 cultures, from which all living cells had been removed, were capable of inducing aggregation in naı̈ve wild-type (WT) cells, indicating that the factors that promote aggregation are secreted into the media. A quantitative proteomics analysis identified 131 proteins differentially present in the media in which different saz mutants had grown compared to the media in which WT Chlamydomonas had grown. The major disparities in protein composition detected between the saz1 and the WT media consisted of different levels of pherophorins (PHCs), N ew s an d V ie w s
               
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