A holdfast is a root- or basal plate-like structure of principal importance that
anchors aquatic sessile organisms, including sponges, to hard substrates. There
is to date little information about the nature and origin of sponges’ holdfasts in
both marine and freshwater environments. This work, to our knowledge,
demonstrates for the first time that chitin is an important structural component
within holdfasts of the endemic freshwater demosponge Lubomirskia baicalensis.
Using a variety of techniques (near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure,
Raman, electrospray ionization mas spectrometry, Morgan–Elson assay and Calcofluor
White staining), we show that chitin from the sponge holdfast is much
closer to a-chitin than to b-chitin. Most of the three-dimensional fibrous skeleton
of this sponge consists of spicule-containing proteinaceous spongin. Intriguingly,
the chitinous holdfast is not spongin-based, and is ontogenetically the oldest part
of the sponge body. Sequencing revealed the presence of four previously