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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 7141

Iola G. Boechat and Rita Adrian; Biochemical composition of algivorous freshwater ciliates: You are not what you eat. FEMS Microbiology Ecology 53:393-400, 2005

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The focus of our study was to determine whether the biochemical composition of two algivorous ciliates, both fed the same alga, resembles that of their diet. By comparing both ciliated protozoa we intended to identify species-specific differences in the metabolic features of these ciliates. Carbon- and cell-specific concentrations of fatty acids and essential amino acids were investigated for the ciliates Balanion planctonicum and Urotricha farcta grown on the cryptomonad Cryptomonas phaseolus. Stepwise discriminant analyses (SDA) indicated differences in the biochemical composition between ciliates and their diet and between the two ciliated protozoa. Carbon-specific fatty acid concentrations were usually higher in the ciliates than in their diet, especially concentrations of monounsaturated and some polyunsaturated fatty acids. Except for tryptophan, valine, and lysine, amino acid concentrations were higher in the ciliates than in C. phaseolus. Furthermore, differences in the polyunsaturated fatty acids accounted for the largest discrepancies between the two ciliated protozoa. The higher concentrations in the ciliates compared to their diet suggest that these species are capable of efficiently ingesting, assimilating or possibly synthesizing some fatty acids and amino acids. We conclude that dietary fatty acid and amino acid composition influences the composition of the two ciliated protozoa to a minor extent, and that species-specific differences in fatty acid and amino acid metabolism may be more important determinants of the biochemical composition of the studied ciliates. Moreover, the metabolism of polyunsaturated fatty acids seems to differ more profoundly between the two ciliated protozoa than the metabolism of other fatty acid classes or amino acids.