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| Water fleas are bred in jars like these in Bochum. Photo Credit: © RUB, Marquard |
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Daphnia Chemosensory Defense Mechanisms
The Core Concept: Daphnia (water fleas) exhibit phenotypic plasticity by altering their physical structure—such as growing enlarged heads or defensive spines—in direct response to chemical signals emitted by nearby predators.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: The detection of specific predator chemical signals (kairomones) relies on ionotropic chemoreceptors. The process specifically requires the expression of the sub-type co-receptors IR25a and IR93a to anchor the receptor complex in the cell membrane and successfully process the environmental threat.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Kairomones: Chemical signals emitted by predators that trigger the prey's morphological defense responses.
- Ionotropic Receptors: Membrane-bound receptor complexes that open ion channels upon the binding of specific molecules, serving as the primary detection mechanism.
- Co-receptors IR25a and IR93a: Essential genetic sub-types required to anchor the receptor complex and enable the perception of predator signals.
- RNA Interference (RNAi): The molecular technique utilized to inhibit the translation of messenger RNA into receptor proteins, demonstrating that organisms without these co-receptors fail to develop physical defenses.
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