| Literature DB >> 26387717 |
Sohei Nakayama1, Kazushi Arima1, Kotoe Kawai1, Kurato Mohri1, Chihiro Inui1, Wakana Sugano1, Hibiki Koba1, Kentaro Tamada1, Yudai J Nakata1, Kouji Kishimoto1, Miyuki Arai-Shindo1, Chiaki Kojima1, Takeo Matsumoto2, Toshihiko Fujimori3, Kiyokazu Agata1, Noriko Funayama4.
Abstract
Animal bodies are shaped by skeletons, which are built inside the body by biomineralization of condensed mesenchymal cells in vertebrates [1, 2] and echinoderms [3, 4], or outside the body by apical secretion of extracellular matrices by epidermal cell layers in arthropods [5]. In each case, the skeletons' shapes are a direct reflection of the pattern of skeleton-producing cells [6]. Here we report a newly discovered mode of skeleton formation: assembly of sponges' mineralized skeletal elements (spicules) in locations distant from where they were produced. Although it was known that internal skeletons of sponges consist of spicules assembled into large pole-and-beam structures with a variety of morphologies [7-10], the spicule assembly process (i.e., how spicules become held up and connected basically in staggered tandem) and what types of cells act in this process remained unexplored. Here we found that mature spicules are dynamically transported from where they were produced and then pierce through outer epithelia, and their basal ends become fixed to substrate or connected with such fixed spicules. Newly discovered "transport cells" mediate spicule movement and the "pierce" step, and collagen-secreting basal-epithelial cells fix spicules to the substratum, suggesting that the processes of spiculous skeleton construction are mediated separately by specialized cells. Division of labor by manufacturer, transporter, and cementer cells, and iteration of the sequential mechanical reactions of "transport," "pierce," "raise up," and "cementation," allows construction of the spiculous skeleton spicule by spicule as a self-organized biological structure, with the great plasticity in size and shape required for indeterminate growth, and generating the great morphological diversity of individual sponges.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26387717 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.08.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834