Paramecium continues to be used to study motility, behavior, exocytosis, and the relationship between the germ and the somatic nuclei. Recent progress in molecular genetics is described. Toward cloning genes that correspond to mutant phenotypes, a method combining complementation with microinjected DNA and library sorting has been used successfully in cloning several novel genes crucial in membrane excitation and in trichocyst discharge. Paramecium transformation en masse has now been shown by using electroporation or bioballistics. Gene silencing has also been discovered in Paramecium, recently. Some 200 Paramecium genes, full length or partial, have already been cloned largely by homology. Generalizing the use of gene silencing and related reverse-genetic techniques would allow us to correlate these genes with their function in vivo.
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1 January 2000
Recent Advances in the Molecular Genetics of Paramecium
Ching Kung,
Yoshiro Saimi,
W. John Haynes,
Kit-Yin Ling,
Roland Kissmehl
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The Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology
Vol. 47 • No. 1
January 2000
Vol. 47 • No. 1
January 2000
Behavioral mutants
Calmodulin
Ciliates
Complementation cloning
endocytosis
gene silencing
library sorting