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Can cytochalasin B be used as an inhibitor of feeding in grazing experiments in ciliates?

Can cytochalasin B be used as an inhibitor of feeding in grazing experiments in ciliates?
Can cytochalasin B be used as an inhibitor of feeding in grazing experiments in ciliates?
The effects of cytochalasin B and dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) on ciliate ingestion and growth were investigated in laboratory cultures of the freshwater ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis and the marine ciliate Uronema marinum, in order to assess whether cytochalasin B could be used to inhibit grazing selectively in natural ciliate communities. The ciliates were exposed to a final concentration of 0–10 ?g ml?1 cytochalasin B dissolved in 0.4% DMSO, and to 0–0.4% DMSO only, for between 1 and 48 hours, then fed carmine particles as tracers of particle ingestion. DMSO had no effect on particle ingestion. Cytochalasin B reduced particle ingestion in U. marinum and T. pyriformis at respective concentrations of ?0.1?g.ml?1 and ?1.0 ?g ml?1, achieving a maximum effect after 4–8 hours. The effect of cytochalasin B was greater on U. marinum, with a minimum of only 4% of the population feeding after 4 hours exposure to 10 ?g ml?1, as compared to a minimum of 48% recorded for T. pyriformis after 8 hours exposure to the same concentration. Cytochalasin B and DMSO at these concentrations had no effect on ciliate growth rates over 48 hours suggesting that the drug has potential as a means of reducing ciliate grazing in field samples
0932-4739
309-315
Leakey, Raymond J.G.
953c7841-5b45-41ce-bd3c-77238b115de0
Wilks, Sandra A.
86c1f41a-12b3-451c-9245-b1a21775e993
Murray, Alistair W.A.
1e58b4b7-97ef-4977-9f4f-f71d3619ca34
Leakey, Raymond J.G.
953c7841-5b45-41ce-bd3c-77238b115de0
Wilks, Sandra A.
86c1f41a-12b3-451c-9245-b1a21775e993
Murray, Alistair W.A.
1e58b4b7-97ef-4977-9f4f-f71d3619ca34

Leakey, Raymond J.G., Wilks, Sandra A. and Murray, Alistair W.A. (1994) Can cytochalasin B be used as an inhibitor of feeding in grazing experiments in ciliates? European Journal of Protistology, 30 (3), 309-315. (doi:10.1016/S0932-4739(11)80077-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The effects of cytochalasin B and dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) on ciliate ingestion and growth were investigated in laboratory cultures of the freshwater ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis and the marine ciliate Uronema marinum, in order to assess whether cytochalasin B could be used to inhibit grazing selectively in natural ciliate communities. The ciliates were exposed to a final concentration of 0–10 ?g ml?1 cytochalasin B dissolved in 0.4% DMSO, and to 0–0.4% DMSO only, for between 1 and 48 hours, then fed carmine particles as tracers of particle ingestion. DMSO had no effect on particle ingestion. Cytochalasin B reduced particle ingestion in U. marinum and T. pyriformis at respective concentrations of ?0.1?g.ml?1 and ?1.0 ?g ml?1, achieving a maximum effect after 4–8 hours. The effect of cytochalasin B was greater on U. marinum, with a minimum of only 4% of the population feeding after 4 hours exposure to 10 ?g ml?1, as compared to a minimum of 48% recorded for T. pyriformis after 8 hours exposure to the same concentration. Cytochalasin B and DMSO at these concentrations had no effect on ciliate growth rates over 48 hours suggesting that the drug has potential as a means of reducing ciliate grazing in field samples

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S0932473911800775 - Accepted Manuscript
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Published date: 29 August 1994
Organisations: Environmental

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 348395
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348395
ISSN: 0932-4739
PURE UUID: ae2ba1e2-1b9d-489a-99e5-679a35d669b5
ORCID for Sandra A. Wilks: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4134-9415

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Date deposited: 01 Mar 2013 15:19
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:57

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Contributors

Author: Raymond J.G. Leakey
Author: Sandra A. Wilks ORCID iD
Author: Alistair W.A. Murray

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