4.5 Article

Feast or flee: bioelectrical regulation of feeding and predator evasion behaviors in the planktonic alveolate Favella sp (Spirotrichia)

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 219, Issue 3, Pages 445-456

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.121871

Keywords

Favella; Schmidingerella arcuata; Action potential; Ciliate; Electrophysiology; Signal transduction

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [IOS 0949744]
  2. National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Award [IOS 1407059]

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Alveolate (ciliates and dinoflagellates) grazers are integral components of the marine food web and must therefore be able to sense a range of mechanical and chemical signals produced by prey and predators, integrating them via signal transduction mechanisms to respond with effective prey capture and predator evasion behaviors. However, the sensory biology of alveolate grazers is poorly understood. Using novel techniques that combine electrophysiological measurements and high-speed videomicroscopy, we investigated the sensory biology of Favella sp., a model alveolate grazer, in the context of its trophic ecology. Favella sp. produced frequent rhythmic depolarizations (similar to 500 ms long) that caused backward swimming and are responsible for endogenous swimming patterns relevant to foraging. Contact of both prey cells and non-prey polystyrene microspheres at the cilia produced immediate mechanostimulated depolarizations (similar to 500 ms long) that caused backward swimming, and likely underlie aggregative swimming patterns of Favella sp. in response to patches of prey. Contact of particles at the peristomal cavity that were not suitable for ingestion resulted in depolarizations after a lag of similar to 600 ms, allowing time for particles to be processed before rejection. Ingestion of preferred prey particles was accompanied by transient hyperpolarizations (similar to 1 s) that likely regulate this step of the feeding process. Predation attempts by the copepod Acartia tonsa elicited fast (similar to 20 ms) animal-like action potentials accompanied by rapid contraction of the cell to avoid predation. We have shown that the sensory mechanisms of Favella sp. are finely tuned to the type, location, and intensity of stimuli from prey and predators.

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