dcsimg

Staining strategy reveals symbiotic interactions in marine protists

Image of protozoans

Description:

Summary[edit] Description: English: e-HCFM-staining strategy is effective in revealing symbiotic interactions in marine protists These seven cells, fixed on board Tara and kept at 4°C for several years, were imaged manually using the e-HCFM workflow. Each cell is illustrated by two panels: the left side overlays all available fluorescent channels whereas the right side displays only the chlorophyll and the Hoechst fluorescence. Four fluorescent channels were recorded: (i) Green: cellular membranes (DiOC6(3)) indicate the core cell bodies; it also stains loricas of tintinnid ciliates (g); (ii) Blue: DNA (Hoechst) identifies nuclei; it also stains the cell-wall of thecate dinoflagellate (a, c); (iii) Red: chlorophyll autofluorescence resolves chloroplasts; (iv) Cyan: PLL-A546 is a generic counterstain for visualizing eukaryotic cells’ surface (not used in a, (c). 3D reconstructions were conducted with the software Imaris (Bitplane). Scale bar is 10 µm. (a) Association between the heterotrophic dinoflagellate Amphisolenia and unidentified cyanobacteria hosted inside the cell wall (arrow head). (b) The diatom Corethron sp. harbors several epiphytic nanoflagellates living in small lorica and attached onto the diatom frustule (arrow head). These have been observed in association with different diatom species. (c) The dinoflagellate Citharistes sp. has developed a chamber (phaeosome) for housing cyanobacteria (arrow head). (d) The diatom Thalassiosira sp. is surrounded by a belt chain of 14 coccolithophores (Reticulofenestra sessilis, arrow head). (e) A juvenile pelagic foraminifer hosts endosymbiotic microalgae (arrowhead), likely Pelagodinium dinoflagellates. (f) Colonies of Fragillariopsis sp. diatoms are regularly observed in close interaction with tintinnid Salpingella sp. ciliate (arrowhead). The tintinnid lorica is inserted inside the groove of the barrel formed by the diatom chain. (g) The lorica of the ciliate Tintinnopsis sp. aggregates several epiphyte pennate diatoms, which were still alive prior to fixation as chloroplast and nuclei are visible (arrow head). Date: 31 October 2017. Source: [1] doi:10.7554/eLife.26066.016. Author: Sebastien Colin, Luis Pedro Coelho, Shinichi Sunagawa, Chris Bowler, Eric Karsenti, Peer Bork, Rainer Pepperkok, Colomban de Vargas.

Included On The Following Pages:

This image is not featured in any collections.

Source Information

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Sebastien Colin, Luis Pedro Coelho, Shinichi Sunagawa, Chris Bowler, Eric Karsenti, Peer Bork, Rainer Pepperkok, Colomban de Vargas
creator
Sebastien Colin, Luis Pedro Coelho, Shinichi Sunagawa, Chris Bowler, Eric Karsenti, Peer Bork, Rainer Pepperkok, Colomban de Vargas
source
[1]
original
original media file
visit source
partner site
Wikimedia Commons
ID
33c18d10d7f80c338f742bf0eaed90c9