Sponges and evolutionary origins
Sponges represent our distant animal relatives. They do not have a nervous system but do have a simple body for filter feeding. Surveying the cell types in the freshwater sponge
Spongilla lacustris
, Musser
et al
. found that many genes important in synaptic communication are expressed in cells of the small digestive chambers. They found secretory machinery characteristic of the presynapse in small multipolar cells contacting all other cells and also the receptive apparatus of the postsynapse in the choanocytes that generate water flow and digest microbial food. These results suggest that the first directed communication in animals may have evolved to regulate feeding, serving as a starting point on the long path toward nervous system evolution. —BAP
An extreme bottom-up filling variant of superconformal Au electrodeposition yielding void-free filling of recessed features is demonstrated with diffraction gratings composed of a twodimensional patterned "chessboard" array of square vias of aspect ratio (depth/width) ≈ 23 as well as one-dimensional arrays of trenches having aspect ratios exceeding 50 and 65. Deposition on planar and patterned substrates is examined in several near-neutral x mol•L -1 Na3Au(SO3)2 + 0.64 mol•L -1 Na2SO3 electrolytes (x = [0.08, 0.16, 0.32]) containing ≈ 50 mol•L -1 Bi 3+ additive. The electrolytes are similar to those used in earlier work, although the upper bound on Au(SO3)2 concentration is twofold greater than previously described. Filling results are complemented by associated current and deposition charge transients whose features, particularly with well controlled pH, exhibit repeatable behaviors and timescales for incubation of passive deposition
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