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Spicule and flagellated chamber formation in a growth zone of Aphrocallistes vastus (Porifera, Hexactinellida)
Author(s) -
Kahn Amanda S.,
Leys Sally P.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
invertebrate biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.486
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 1744-7410
pISSN - 1077-8306
DOI - 10.1111/ivb.12155
Subject(s) - sponge , sponge spicule , biology , reef , spicule , anatomy , paleontology , ecology
Three species of glass sponges (Class Hexactinellida) form massive deep‐water reefs by growing on the skeletons of past generations, with new growth largely vertical and away from sediment that buries the lower portions. Growth is therefore essential for reef health, but how glass sponges produce new skeleton or tissue is not known. We used fluorescence, light, and electron microscopy to study skeletal and tissue growth in the reef‐forming glass sponge Aphrocallistes vastus . The sponge consists of a single large tube (the osculum), usually with several side branches, each of which can function as an effective excurrent vent. New tissue forms at the tips of each of these extensions, but how this occurs in a syncytial animal, and how the tubes expand laterally as the sponge gets larger, are both unknown. The fluorescent dye PDMPO labeled more spicule types in the tips of the sponge than elsewhere, indicating growth that was concentrated at the edge of the osculum. New tissue production was tracked using the thymidine analog EdU. EdU‐labeled nuclei were found predominantly at the edge or lip of the osculum. In that region new flagellated chambers were formed from clusters of choanoblasts that spread out around the enlarging chamber. In cellular sponges clusters of choanocytes form flagellated chambers through several rounds of mitotic divisions, and also by immigration of mesohyl cells, to expand the chamber to full size. By contrast, chambers in glass sponges expand as choanoblasts produce enucleate collar bodies to fill them out. Growing chambers with enucleate structures may be an adaptation to life in the deep sea if chambers with cells, and therefore more nuclei, are costly to build.

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