“…Moreover, troponin has been detected in actin filament networks in non-striated muscle of the tardigrades (water bears) (Obinata et al, 2011) and in gonad myoepithelial cells of nematodes (Ono and Ono, 2004;Obinata et al, 2010), suggesting the possibility that troponin is involved in the regulation of a variety of motile cells. In this study, we focused on an isocrinid sea lily (stalked crinoid), a taxon that constitutes the most basal group of extant echinoderms (Rouse et al, 2013) and a member of subphylum Pelmatozoa, to clarify whether troponin is lacking from the beginning of the evolution of echinoderms. According to microscopic observations, crinoids, some feather stars, have obliquely striated muscle as many invertebrates of protostomes but an unusual Z-system exists in the crinoid muscle (Candia Carnevali and Saita, 1985;Candia Carnevali et al, 1986).…”