Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
First ultrastructural evidence of placental nutrition in a ctenostome bryozoan : example of Amathia verticillata. / Schwaha, Thomas; Moosbrugger, Martin; Walzl, Manfred; Ostrovsky, Andrew N.
в: Zoomorphology, Том 138, № 2, 2019, стр. 221-232.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - First ultrastructural evidence of placental nutrition in a ctenostome bryozoan
T2 - example of Amathia verticillata
AU - Schwaha, Thomas
AU - Moosbrugger, Martin
AU - Walzl, Manfred
AU - Ostrovsky, Andrew N.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2019, The Author(s).
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Matrotrophy and its most advanced mode—placentation—is a masterpiece of nature contributing to offspring fitness. It has been studied mainly in vertebrates, whereas so-called placental analogues in invertebrates are poorly known. Here we use an ultrastructural approach to report the first evidence of placentation in the ctenostome bryozoan Amathia verticillata. This marine colonial suspension-feeder incubates its progeny in the tentacle sheath, which is transformed into a brood chamber. When the fertilized egg is deposited into the brood cavity, the tentacle sheath wall, originally consisting of flattened epithelial cells, is modified into an embryophore (placental analogue) via cell multiplication and hypertrophy. The embryophore (nutritive) cells develop a massive secretory apparatus and acquire ‘microvillous’ apical membranes indicating the presence of exocytosis. In turn, the embryo surface cells also form a complex network of irregular projections and foldings. Coated pits beneath this network indicate active endocytosis. The developing embryo is adjacent to the embryophore and the narrow slit between them is filled with dense and flocculent (presumably nutritive) material. The embryo increases up to 24-fold in size indicating substantial matrotrophic provisioning. We compare the ultrastructural details of placentation in A. verticillata with those known in cheilostome bryozoans, and review the major structural principles of placentation in Bryozoa in general. We then discuss possible ways of nutrient transport to the embryophore in various bryozoan clades.
AB - Matrotrophy and its most advanced mode—placentation—is a masterpiece of nature contributing to offspring fitness. It has been studied mainly in vertebrates, whereas so-called placental analogues in invertebrates are poorly known. Here we use an ultrastructural approach to report the first evidence of placentation in the ctenostome bryozoan Amathia verticillata. This marine colonial suspension-feeder incubates its progeny in the tentacle sheath, which is transformed into a brood chamber. When the fertilized egg is deposited into the brood cavity, the tentacle sheath wall, originally consisting of flattened epithelial cells, is modified into an embryophore (placental analogue) via cell multiplication and hypertrophy. The embryophore (nutritive) cells develop a massive secretory apparatus and acquire ‘microvillous’ apical membranes indicating the presence of exocytosis. In turn, the embryo surface cells also form a complex network of irregular projections and foldings. Coated pits beneath this network indicate active endocytosis. The developing embryo is adjacent to the embryophore and the narrow slit between them is filled with dense and flocculent (presumably nutritive) material. The embryo increases up to 24-fold in size indicating substantial matrotrophic provisioning. We compare the ultrastructural details of placentation in A. verticillata with those known in cheilostome bryozoans, and review the major structural principles of placentation in Bryozoa in general. We then discuss possible ways of nutrient transport to the embryophore in various bryozoan clades.
KW - Aquatic colonial invertebrates
KW - Brooding
KW - Matrotrophy
KW - Placenta
KW - Vesicularioidea
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85063207370&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00435-019-00438-4
DO - 10.1007/s00435-019-00438-4
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85063207370
VL - 138
SP - 221
EP - 232
JO - Zoomorphology
JF - Zoomorphology
SN - 0340-6725
IS - 2
ER -
ID: 40550568