| Literature DB >> 31388768 |
Abstract
Digestive systems and extracellular digestion are key animal features, but their emergence during early animal evolution is currently poorly understood. As the last common ancestor of non-bilaterian animal groups (sponges, ctenophores, placozoans and cnidarians) dates back to the beginning of animal life, their study and comparison provides important insights into the early evolution of digestive systems and functions. Here, I have compiled an overview of the development and cell biology of digestive tissues in non-bilaterian animals. I will highlight the fundamental differences between extracellular and intracellular digestive processes, and how these are distributed among animals. Cnidarians (e.g. sea anemones, corals, jellyfish), the phylogenetic outgroup of bilaterians (e.g. vertebrates, flies, annelids), occupy a key position to reconstruct the evolution of bilaterian gut evolution. A major focus will therefore lie on the development and cell biology of digestive tissues in cnidarians, especially sea anemones, and how they compare to bilaterian gut tissues. In that context, I will also review how a recent study on the gastrula fate map of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis challenges our long-standing conceptions on the evolution of cnidarian and bilaterian germ layers and guts.Entities:
Keywords: Cnidaria; Ctenophora; Extracellular digestion; Gastrovascular system; Germ layer evolution; Gut evolution; Intracellular digestion; Placozoa; Porifera
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31388768 PMCID: PMC6733828 DOI: 10.1007/s00441-019-03075-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Res ISSN: 0302-766X Impact factor: 5.249
Fig. 1The molecular, cellular and phylogenetic basis of extracellular and intracellular digestion. a The basic molecular and cellular principles of nutrient ‘absorption’ by phagocytosis, receptor-mediated endocytosis, macropinocytosis or transmembrane transport. b The phylogenetic distribution of extracellular (‘ext’, yellow) and intracellular (‘int’, purple) digestion activities. White, empty boxes: absence of activity. Half boxes: partial absence of phagocytosis or of intracellular digestion in certain subgroups. Light colours represent minor roles of respective mode. Comments: (1) Uptake of ferritin suggests micropinocytosis; phagocytosis may be present in fibre cells, where an ‘immunity role’ is probable. (2) Xenoturbella: probably only macropinocytosis present (Israelsson 2008). (3) Secretion of lysosomal enzymes in Ciona intestinalis (Thomas 1970) and no phagocytosis, but only pinocytosis of HRP in Oikopleura (Cima et al. 2002). (4) Some nematodes show pinocytosis, but no phagocytosis. (5) Pinocytosis shown but no phagocytosis. (6) Pycnogonids, arachnids and crustaceans have both extra- and intracellular digestion. All other arthropod groups (with some exceptions, such as blood-sucking insects) lack intracellular digestion. (7) Present in Priapulida; in Kinorhyncha, Loricifera: extracellular digestion is likely, considering the presence of gland and zymogen cells; intracellular digestion is unstudied. (9) Cephalopoda present only pinocytosis. (10) Extracellular digestion dominates in most annelids, but intracellular digestion plays a role in leeches. In some polychaetes, phagocytic coelomocytes appear to invade the gut epithelium. (11) Minor role for extracellular digestion; only carbohydrase activity found. (12) Minor role for extracellular digestion. c Comparison between the insect (upper half) and mammal guts (lower half), and their secretory and absorptive capacities. Yellow arrows: secretion of polysaccharidase (e.g. Amylase) and endopeptidase (e.g. Trypsin). Black arrows: secretion of oligo- and disaccharidases, and oligo- and dipeptidases. Dashed arrows: Apical (black) and baso-lateral (blue) transmembrane transport of amino acids and monomeric carbohydrates (e.g. glucose, fructose).d Schematic representations comparing vertebrate and insect enterocytes. Colours as in (c). b is based on following, non-exhaustive list of references: Choanoflagellates (Dayel and King 2014), Ctenophora (Bumann and Puls 1997; Hernandez-Nicaise 1991), Porifera (Imsiecke 1993; Leys and Eerkes-Medrano 2006; Weissenfels 1982; Willenz and Van De Vyver 1982), Placozoa (Grell and Ruthmann 1991; Smith et al. 2014), Cnidaria (Arai 1997; Bouillon et al. 2006; Van-Praët 1985), Xenacoelomorpha (Israelsson 2008; Markosova 1986; Pedersen 1964), Cephalochordata (Biuw and Hulting 1971), Urochordata (Thomas 1970; Yonge 1937), Vertebrata (Karasov and Hume 1997), Hemichordata (Bridges and Woodwick 1994), Echinodermata (Tokin and Filimonova 1977), Chaetognatha (Arnaud et al. 1996), Nematoda (Clokey and Jacobson 1986; Riley 1973; Wright 1991), Tardigrada (Biserova and Mustafina 2015; Dewel et al. 1993; Yonge 1937), Onychophora (Heatley 1936; Manton 1937; Storch and Ruhberg 1993), Arthropoda (Ceccaldi 1989; Fahrenbach and Arango 2007; Filimonova 2008; Miguel-Aliaga et al. 2018; Wägele et al. 1981), Scalidophora (Kristensen 1991; Kristensen and Higgins 1991; Storch 1991; Storch et al. 1989), Rotifera (Wurdak 1987; Yonge 1937), Micrognathozoa (Møbjerg Kristensen and Funch 2000; Yonge 1937), Gnathostomulida (Lammert 1991),Platyhelminthes (Antoniazzi and Silveira 1996; Bowen et al. 1974; Jennings 1968; Ruppert et al. 2004), Gastrotricha (Ruppert 1991; Ruppert et al. 2004; Teuchert 1977), Entoprocta (Morton 1960; Ruppert et al. 2004), Mollusca (Boucaud-Camou and Yim 1980; Lobo-da-Cunha 2000; Owen 1974; Yonge 1937), Annelida (Jennings and Van Der Lande 1967; Jeuniaux 1969; Michel et al. 1984; Yonge 1937), Nemertea (Ruppert et al. 2004), Brachiopoda (Morton 1960; Steele-Petrovic 1976; Yonge 1937), Phoronida (Vandermeulen and Reid 1969), Bryozoa (Yonge 1937)
Fig. 2Digestive cell types and tissues of choanoflagellates (a), sponges (b), ctenophores (c) and placozoans (d). Purple cells represent cell types or tissues involved in phagocytosis or pinocytosis. Yellow cells/tissues: exocrine. Fla: flagellum; epi: epithelial cell; fv: food vesicle; glyc: glycogen particles; gvc: gastrovascular cavity; mv: microvilli
Fig. 3a–d The distribution of tissues with extra- or intracellular digestion in scyphozoan (a), cubozoan (b), hydrozoan (c), staurozoan (d) and anthozoan (e) cnidarians. Dotted yellow: exclusively exocrine; purple: exclusively phagocytic/pinocytic; brown: mixed tissues. Grey: no exocrine, phagocytic or pinocytic activity described. Boxed regions in (e) are magnified in Fig. 4a and b. In staurozoans and cubomedusae, no data is available on phagocytic or pinocytic tissues or cell types. Gvc: gastrovascular cavity; hs: hypostome; mes: mesentery; tent: tentacle
Fig. 4Development, structure and cell type composition of adult (a, b) or juvenile (c, d) mesenteries of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis. a, b Schematic cross-section of adult mesenteries at gonadal (a) and non-gonadal (b) levels. c Schematic development and fate map from gastrula stages until juvenile polyp. All schematics represent longitudinal cross-sections except lower right (cross section). d Schematic representation of exocrine (dotted yellow) and phagocytic (purple) tissues in juvenile Nematostella polyps. Upper and lower left schematics are cross-sections while lower right schematics is a longitudinal section. Cil: ciliated; epid.: epidermis; m. muscle; ret.: reticulate; interm.: intermediate
Fig. 5Schematic representations of germ layer homologies between cnidarians and bilaterians (a) and a hypothetical evolutionary scenario of the transition between two-layered (diplobastic) and three-layered (triploblastic) animals (b). Regions within dashed boxes in (b) are magnified below. coel.: coelomic cavity; gvc: gastrovascular cavity