Laboratory for Innovation and Sustainability of Marine Biological Resources (ECOMARE), Centre for Environmental and Marine Studies (CESAM), Department of Biology, University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal.
PLoS Biol. 2022 Nov 8;20(11):e3001857. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001857. eCollection 2022 Nov.
Kleptoplasty, the process by which a host organism sequesters and retains algal chloroplasts, is relatively common in protists. The origin of the plastid varies, as do the length of time it is retained in the host and the functionality of the association. In metazoa, the capacity for long-term (several weeks to months) maintenance of photosynthetically active chloroplasts is a unique characteristic of a handful of sacoglossan sea slugs. This capability has earned these slugs the epithets "crawling leaves" and "solar-powered sea slugs." This Unsolved Mystery explores the basis of chloroplast maintenance and function and attempts to clarify contradictory results in the published literature. We address some of the mysteries of this remarkable association. Why are functional chloroplasts retained? And how is the function of stolen chloroplasts maintained without the support of the algal nucleus?
偷叶绿体,即一种生物体隔离和保留藻类叶绿体的过程,在原生动物中相对常见。质体的起源不同,其在宿主中保留的时间长短和共生体的功能也不同。在后生动物中,能够长期(数周至数月)维持光合作用活性叶绿体是少数腹足纲海蛞蝓的独特特征。这种能力使这些海蛞蝓获得了“爬行的叶子”和“太阳能驱动的海蛞蝓”的称号。本未解之谜探讨了叶绿体维持和功能的基础,并试图澄清已发表文献中的矛盾结果。我们探讨了这种非凡共生关系的一些奥秘。为什么保留功能性叶绿体?没有藻类细胞核的支持,如何维持偷来的叶绿体的功能?