Amoeboid organism solves complex nutritional challenges
- 9 March 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 107 (10), 4607-4611
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0912198107
Abstract
A fundamental question in nutritional biology is how distributed systems maintain an optimal supply of multiple nutrients essential for life and reproduction. In the case of animals, the nutritional requirements of the cells within the body are coordinated by the brain in neural and chemical dialogue with sensory systems and peripheral organs. At the level of an insect society, the requirements for the entire colony are met by the foraging efforts of a minority of workers responding to cues emanating from the brood. Both examples involve components specialized to deal with nutrient supply and demand ( brains and peripheral organs, foragers and brood). However, some of the most species-rich, largest, and ecologically significant heterotrophic organisms on earth, such as the vast mycelial networks of fungi, comprise distributed networks without specialized centers: How do these organisms coordinate the search for multiple nutrients? We address this question in the acellular slime mold Physarum polycephalum and show that this extraordinary organism can make complex nutritional decisions, despite lacking a coordination center and comprising only a single vast multinucleate cell. We show that a single slime mold is able to grow to contact patches of different nutrient quality in the precise proportions necessary to compose an optimal diet. That such organisms have the capacity to maintain the balance of carbon-and nitrogen-based nutrients by selective foraging has considerable implications not only for our understanding of nutrient balancing in distributed systems but for the functional ecology of soils, nutrient cycling, and carbon sequestration.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Environment-dependent morphology in plasmodium of true slime mold Physarum polycephalum and a network growth modelJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2009
- Lifespan and reproduction in Drosophila : New insights from nutritional geometryProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- The Development and Evolution of Division of Labor and Foraging Specialization in a Social Insect (Apis mellifera L.)Published by Elsevier ,2006
- Cannibal crickets on a forced march for protein and saltProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Light Irradiation Induces Fragmentation of the Plasmodium, a Novel Photomorphogenesis in the True Slime Mold Physarum polycephalum: Action Spectra and Evidence for Involvement of the Phytochrome¶Photochemistry and Photobiology, 2001
- Fragmentation of the plasmodium into equally sized pieces by low temperatures in the true slime moldPhysarum polycephalum: A new morphogenesisProtoplasma, 1999
- Quantification of the fractal nature of colonies of Trichoderma virideMycological Research, 1990
- The Chemotactic Response of Plasmodia of the Myxomycete Physarum polycephalum to Sugars and Related CompoundsJournal of General Microbiology, 1978
- Chemotaxis of Physarum polycephalum towards Carbohydrates, Amino Acids and NucleotidesJournal of General Microbiology, 1977
- Nutrition and Chemotaxis in the Myxomycete Physarum polycephalum: the Effect of Carbohydrates on the PlasmodiumJournal of General Microbiology, 1970