Tissues of multicellular animals are maintained due to a tight balance between cell proliferation and programmed cell death. Sponges are early branching metazoans essential to understanding the key mechanisms of tissue homeostasis. This article is dedicated to the comparative analysis of proliferation and apoptosis in intact tissues of two sponges, Halisarca dujardinii (class Demospongiae) and Leucosolenia variabilis (class Calcarea).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSponges (phylum Porifera) are highly specialized filter-feeding metazoans, pumping and filtering water with a network of canals and chambers, the aquiferous system. Most sponges have a leuconoid aquiferous system, characterized by choanocytes organized in small spherical chambers connected with ambient water by a complex net of canals. Such organization requires substantial pressure difference to drive water through an elaborate system of canals, so the choanocytes in leuconoid sponges have several structural features to generate pressure difference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe phenomenon of whole-body regeneration means rebuilding of the whole body of an animal from a small fragment or even a group of cells. In this process, the old axial relationships are often lost, and new ones are established. An amazing model for studying this process is sponges, some of which are able to regenerate into a definitive organism after dissociation into cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile virtually all animals show certain abilities for regeneration after an injury, these abilities vary greatly among metazoans. Porifera (Sponges) is basal metazoans characterized by a wide variety of different regenerative processes, including whole-body regeneration (WBR). Considering phylogenetic position and unique body organization, sponges are highly promising models, as they can shed light on the origin and early evolution of regeneration in general and WBR in particular.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ability of sponge cells to reaggregate and reconstruct intact functional organism is known for more than 100 years. This process was studied in numerous species of sponges, and its interspecific variability is well described. However, some data also indicate the existence of a certain intraspecific variability of the cell reaggregation.
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