Sea Slug Steals Photosynthesis Genes From Algae
The brilliant emerald green sea slug, Elysia chlorotica, spends months living on sunlight just like plants. Its been called the photosynthesizing sea slug in the past, but how it manages to do this as well as it does is a complete mystery. In a new study appearing in the Biological Bulletin, researchers reveal that the sea slug has incorporated genes from the algae that it eats.
"There is no way on earth that genes from an alga should work inside an animal cell," says Sidney Pierce from the University of South Florida. "And yet here, they do. They allow the animal to rely on sunshine for its nutrition. So if something happens to their food source, they have a way of not starving to death until they find more algae to eat."
Chloroplast are plant organelles that contain chlorophyll, the green photosynthetic pigment. Researchers have known since the 1970s that this sea slug steals chloroplasts from the alga Vaucheria litorea. The sea slugs embed the chloroplasts into their own digestive cells, where the organelles continue to photosynthesize for up to nine monthsthats even longer than they would perform in algae. The sea slugs stay nourished thanks to the carbohydrates and lipids produced with photosynthesis.
But until now, no one knew for sure how the slugs manage to maintain these pilfered chloroplasts. Using DNA amplification, sequencing, and advanced imaging techniques, Pierce and colleagues revealed that the sea slugs chromosomes contain genes from the algae that code for both chloroplast proteins and chlorophyll synthesis.
https://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/sea-slug-steals-photosynthesis-genes-its-algae-meal/