Auxospores are involved in re-establishing the normal size in diatoms, as successive mitoticcell divisions leads to a decrease in cell size. This occurs because each daughter cell produced by cell division inherits one of the two valves that make up the frustule (a silicacell wall), and then grows a smaller valve within it. Consequently, each division cycle decreases the average size of diatom cells in a population. When its size becomes too small, a dividing diatom cell produces an auxospore to expand its cell size back to that which is normal for vegetative cells.[2]
Auxospores can also play a role in sexual reproduction in diatoms, and may be formed after haploidgametes fuse to form a diploidzygote.[3]
Finally, auxospores can be produced by diatoms to act as dormant stages, sometimes referred to as "resting spores." These are used to survive periods of time that are unfavourable to growth, such as the low-light period of winter or while nutrients are depleted.[1]
Structure
The auxospore is covered by a flexible cell wall called perizonium, which replace the thin zygotic membrane when the auxospore originates from a zygote, and doesn't restrict cell growth. A few species don't form a perizonium, and has a wall of scales and imperforate silica instead. Usually the auxospore is photosynthetic and depends on light to grow, but with sufficient accumulated storage material before its formation, it can be formed formed without any further supply of energy. After maximal size has been reached, a new diatom with a rigid frustule, a so-called initial cell that is significally larger than its parent cells, is formed inside the auxospore which it eventually breaks free from.[4][5][6][7][8][9]
^Chepurnov, V.A., Mann, D.G., Sabbe, K. and Vyverman, W. (2004). Experimental studies on sexual reproduction in diatoms. International Review of Cytology237, 91-154.