| Literature DB >> 17285638 |
Hermann Ehrlich1, Manuel Maldonado, Klaus-Dieter Spindler, Carsten Eckert, Thomas Hanke, René Born, Caren Goebel, Paul Simon, Sascha Heinemann, Hartmut Worch.
Abstract
The Porifera (sponges) are often regarded as the oldest, extant metazoan phylum, also bearing the ancestral stage for most features occurring in higher animals. The absence of chitin in sponges, except for the wall of peculiar resistance bodies produced by a highly derived fresh-water group, is puzzling, since it points out chitin to be an autapomorphy for a particular sponge family rather than the ancestral condition within the metazoan lineage. By investigating the internal proteinaceous (spongin) skeleton of two demosponges (Aplysina sp. and Verongula gigantea) using a wide array of techniques (Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), Raman, X-ray, Calcofluor White Staining, Immunolabeling, and chitinase test), we show that chitin is a component of the outermost layer (cuticle) of the skeletal fibers of these demosponges. FTIR and Raman spectra, as well as X-ray difractograms consistently revealed that sponge chitin is much closer to the alpha-chitin known from other animals than to beta-chitin. These findings support the view that the occurrence of a chitin-producing system is the ancestral condition in Metazoa, and that the alpha-chitin is the primitive form in animals.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17285638 DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.21156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol ISSN: 1552-5007 Impact factor: 2.656