2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0019639
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New Insights into Placozoan Sexual Reproduction and Development

Abstract: Unraveling animal life cycles and embryonic development is basic to understanding animal biology and often sheds light on phylogenetic relationships. A key group for understanding the evolution of the Metazoa is the early branching phylum Placozoa, which has attracted rapidly increasing attention. Despite over a hundred years of placozoan research the life cycle of this enigmatic phylum remains unknown. Placozoa are a unique model system for which the nuclear genome was published before the basic biology (i.e.… Show more

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Cited by 66 publications
(88 citation statements)
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“…Notably absent from our developmental surveys below are data from placozoans. As there has been little advancement in efforts to spawn and successfully rear placozoan embryos through development [14], little is known about the spatial distribution of gene expression in these animals, and there is little opportunity to test hypotheses raised by the recent sequencing of the genome and proteome of Trichoplax adhaerens [15,16]. Conversely, there have been numerous recent advancements in our understanding of the evolution and development of diverse sponge taxa [17 -19].…”
Section: Using Ctenophores To Reconstruct the Cell Biology Of The Ancmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably absent from our developmental surveys below are data from placozoans. As there has been little advancement in efforts to spawn and successfully rear placozoan embryos through development [14], little is known about the spatial distribution of gene expression in these animals, and there is little opportunity to test hypotheses raised by the recent sequencing of the genome and proteome of Trichoplax adhaerens [15,16]. Conversely, there have been numerous recent advancements in our understanding of the evolution and development of diverse sponge taxa [17 -19].…”
Section: Using Ctenophores To Reconstruct the Cell Biology Of The Ancmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It can be found in tropical and subtropical sea waters, and appears as a flat disc of 2-3 mm diameter consisting of two epithelial layers with a loose layer of fibre cells in between 5 . Trichoplax reproduces in vitro by fission and budding, and although in vitro the egg stadium does not develop into an embryonic stage beyond 64-128 cells, there are clear indications for a bisexual reproduction cycle, which left its signature in the DNA 6,7 . The Trichoplax genome contains 11,500 genes and, interestingly, includes importants genes characteristic of more complex bilaterian animals, such as developmental signalling pathways, neuroendocrine processes and extracellular matrix proteins 1 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At present, the phylum Placozoa is the only monotypic phylum in the animal kingdom, with the only formally described species Trichoplax adhaerens (Schulze, 1883, 1891). Placozoans offer unique possibilities for experimental ecophysiological studies because of their small size, simple morphology, and fast vegetative reproduction (Eitel & Schierwater, 2010; Eitel et al., 2011, 2013; Schierwater, 2005). Vegetative reproduction through binary fission or budding is the usual mode of reproduction in the laboratory and in the field.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vegetative reproduction through binary fission or budding is the usual mode of reproduction in the laboratory and in the field. In contrast, bisexual reproduction is rarely seen in the laboratory, but most likely present in all placozoans (Eitel et al., 2011; Signorovitch, Buss, & Dellaporta, 2007). The details of sexual reproduction and embryonic development in placozoans remain widely unknown, because all efforts to complete the sexual life cycle in the laboratory have been unsuccessful, because embryonic development has never gone beyond the 128 cell stage (Eitel et al., 2011).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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