2022
DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.23138
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Tissue homeostasis in sponges: Quantitative analysis of cell proliferation and apoptosis

Abstract: Background: Tissues of multicellular animals are maintained due to a tight balance between cell proliferation and programmed cell death. Phylum Porifera is an early branching group of metazoans essential to understanding the key mechanisms of tissue homeostasis. This paper is dedicated to the comparative analysis of proliferation and apoptosis in intact tissues of two sponges belonging to distinct Porifera lineages, Halisarca dujardinii (class Demospongiae) and Leucosolenia variabilis (class Calcarea). Results… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The labeling fraction of choanocytes (the proportion of EdU-positive choanocytes to the number of choanocytes) was 10.5 AE 1.8% and 13.4 AE 1.0%, respectively (Table 1). As we reported earlier [21], the absolute majority (> 90%) of labeled cells in both species are represented by choanocytes, flagellated food-entrapping cells of the aquiferous system. Minor populations of cycling cells, however, differ between species, probably reflecting the difference in the anatomical and histological structure of studied sponges.…”
Section: Identifying Proliferating Cell Typessupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…The labeling fraction of choanocytes (the proportion of EdU-positive choanocytes to the number of choanocytes) was 10.5 AE 1.8% and 13.4 AE 1.0%, respectively (Table 1). As we reported earlier [21], the absolute majority (> 90%) of labeled cells in both species are represented by choanocytes, flagellated food-entrapping cells of the aquiferous system. Minor populations of cycling cells, however, differ between species, probably reflecting the difference in the anatomical and histological structure of studied sponges.…”
Section: Identifying Proliferating Cell Typessupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Still, choanocytes are not the only cycling cells in sponges. As expected, we found archaeocytes (amoeboid mesohyl cells) to incorporate labeled nucleotides in H. dujardinii; in demosponges, both choanocytes and archaeocytes are thought to maintain complex tissue dynamics in intact animals through vigorous transdifferentiation and cell migration [14,21,33]. In calcareous sponge L. corallorrhiza, however, proliferating amoebocytes are few (if any), and cycling cells outside the choanoderm are represented by epithelial-like exopinacocytes, endopinacocytes, and ostia-forming porocytes.…”
Section: Sponges Possess Several Types Of Proliferating Cellssupporting
confidence: 77%
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