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Growth and Long-Term Somatic and Germline Chimerism Following Fusion of Juvenile Botryllus schlosseri

TLDR
The costs and benefits of fusion between juveniles are focused on, characterizing growth rates and patterns of somatic and germline chimerism after natural and controlled fusion events and finding that the majority of individual testes in a chimera were clonally derived.
Abstract
The colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri undergoes a histocompatibility reaction that can result in vascular fusion of distinct genotypes, creating a chimera. Chimerism has both potential benefits, such as an immediate increase in size that may enhance growth rates, and costs. For the latter, the presence of multiple genotypes in a chimera can lead to competition between genetically distinct stem cell lineages, resulting in complete replacement of somatic and germline tissues by a single genotype. Although fusion can occur at any point after metamorphosis, previous studies have focused on chimeras created from sexually mature adults, where no benefit to chimerism has been documented. Here we focus on the costs and benefits of fusion between juveniles, characterizing growth rates and patterns of somatic and germline chimerism after natural and controlled fusion events. We also compared outcomes between low- and high-density growth conditions, the latter more likely representative of what occurs in natural populations. We found that growth rates were density-dependent, and that only chimeras grew under high-density conditions. We also observed a positional component to a post-fusion event called resorption, indicating that extrinsic factors were important in this process. Patterns of germline and somatic chimerism and dominance in chimeras made from fused juveniles were equivalent to those after fusion of sexually mature adults, and there were no age-related differences in these processes. Finally, by using genetic markers that could retrospectively assign genotypes, we also found that the majority of individual testes in a chimera were clonally derived.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual and asexual reproduction in the colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri.

TL;DR: This work reviews the main studies detailing rearing, staging methods, reproduction and colony growth of the colonial tunicate Botryllus schlosseri, emphasizing the asymmetry in sexual and asexual reproduction potential, sexual reproduction in the field and the laboratory, and self‐ and cross‐fertilization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ontology for the asexual development and anatomy of the colonial chordate botryllus schlosseri

TL;DR: This work has constructed the first ontology for anatomy and asexual development (blastogenesis) of a bilaterian, the colonial tunicate Botryllus schlosseri, based on studies that investigate the anatomy, blastogenesis and regeneration of this organism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intracolonial genetic variation in the scleractinian coral Seriatopora hystrix

TL;DR: This work investigated the occurrence of intracolonial genetic variation at microsatellite loci in five natural populations of the scleractinian coral Seriatopora hystrix on the Great Barrier Reef, and observed large, apparently stable chimeric colonies that harbored clearly distinct genotypes.
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Integrin-alpha-6+ Candidate stem cells are responsible for whole body regeneration in the invertebrate chordate Botrylloides diegensis.

TL;DR: It is shown that IA6+ Candidate stem cells are responsible for whole body regeneration and give rise to regenerating tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonclonal coloniality: Genetically chimeric colonies through fusion of sexually produced polyps in the hydrozoan Ectopleura larynx.

TL;DR: The data suggest that there are distinct categories of relationships in colonies of E. larynx, likely achieved through a range of processes including budding, regeneration, and fusion of progeny and unrelated polyps, with the possibility for a genetic conflict resolution mechanism.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protochordate allorecognition is controlled by a MHC-like gene system.

TL;DR: The Botryllus histocompatibility system may reflect the original adaptive function of ancestral MHC genes in colonial tunicates, which undergo transplantation in nature.
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The genetic control and consequences of kin recognition by the larvae of a colonial marine invertebrate

TL;DR: Results of field experiments show that sibling planktonic larvae of the sessile colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri settle in aggregations that are much stronger than expected from dispersal distance effects alone, and this kin recognition mechanism promotes co-settlement of histocompatible individuals.
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The Evolution of Allorecognition Specificity in Clonal Invertebrates

TL;DR: This paper evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of the selectionist and nonselectionist theories that have been proposed to account for the evolution and persistence of allotypesic polymorphism and suggests that frequency-dependent or spatially variable selection are the strongest candidates for the maintenance of allotypic variation.
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Isolation and characterization of a protochordate histocompatibility locus

TL;DR: The isolation of a candidate gene encoding an immunoglobulin superfamily member that, by itself, predicts the outcome of histocompatibility reactions is described, and may provide insights into the evolution of vertebrate adaptive immunity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heritable germ and somatic cell lineage competitions in chimeric colonial protochordates

TL;DR: It is demonstrated in chimeric protochordates that primitive germ cell and somatic cell lineages have traits that also make them likely units of natural selection, and this support a leading hypothesis for why the highly polymorphic histocompatibility loci common to many metazoa may have arisen or been maintained.
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