6533b852fe1ef96bd12ab9ae
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Axial (apical-basal) expression of pro-apoptotic and pro-survival genes in the lake baikal demosponge Lubomirskia baicalensis.
Isabel M. MüllerBérengère J.c. LuthringerHeinz C. SchröderSanja Perović-ottstadtBojan HamerWerner E. G. M�llerWerner E.g. MüllerSergey I. BelikovAlexandra BorejkoMatthias WiensO. V. KaluzhnayaO. V. Kaluzhnayasubject
DNA ComplementaryMolecular Sequence DataGene ExpressionApoptosisFresh WaterModels BiologicalConserved sequenceRussiaDemospongePhylogeneticsGene expressionCell polarityGeneticsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceEF Hand MotifsMolecular BiologyGeneCaspaseConserved SequencePhylogenyCaspase 8Glutathione PeroxidasebiologySequence Homology Amino AcidEcologyCaspase 3Cell PolarityCell BiologyGeneral MedicineSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationBlotting NorthernCell biologyPoriferaProtein Structure TertiarySpongeProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2Caspasesbiology.proteindescription
Like in all other Metazoa, also in sponges (Porifera) proliferation, differentiation, and death of cells are controlled by apoptotic processes, thus allowing the establishment of a Bauplan (body plan). The demosponge Lubomirskia baicalensis from the Lake Baikal is especially suitable to assess the role of the apoptotic molecules, since its grade of construction is highly elaborated into an encrusting base and branches composed of modules lined up along the apical-basal axis. The four cDNAs, ALG-2, BAK, MA-3, and Bcl-2, were isolated from this sponge species. The expression levels of these genes follow characteristic gradients. While the proapoptotic genes are highly expressed at the base of the branches and comparably low at the top, the pro-survival gene follows an opposite gradient. Parallel with the tuned expression of these genes, the activities of the apoptosis-executing enzymes caspase-8 (IETDase activity) and caspase-3 (DEVDase activity) are lowest at the top of the branch and highest at their base. This characteristic expression/activity pattern of the genes/enzymes, which had been determined in a few specimens, collected from an unpolluted, natural site, appears reversed in specimens collected from an anthropogenically polluted site. These findings indicate the involvement of apoptotic proteins in the axis formation (branches) in L. baicalensis.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006-03-30 | DNA and cell biology |