Search results for "Sponge"

showing 10 items of 296 documents

Towards a Molecular Systematics of the Lake Baikal/Lake Tuva Sponges

2009

Lake Baikal is famous for its extensive biodiversity that is equaled only by few other lakes. Fascinatingly, about 80% of all the animals the lake hosts are endemic. Sponges (Porifera) that live in symbiosis with photosynthetic algae are the most abundant animal taxon found in the littoral zone of Lake Baikal and have been grouped to the family Lubomirskiidae. In recent years, several attempts to determine the phylogenetic relationship between Lubomirskiidae and cosmopolitan freshwater sponges have been undertaken. Yet the results obtained remain inconclusive. Here, we strive to determine the phylogeny of freshwater sponges with the focus on endemic Lake Baikal species, also taking into acc…

Siliceous spongePaleontologySpeciationTaxonEcologyGenusmedia_common.quotation_subjectMolecular phylogeneticsAllopatric speciationPeripatric speciationBiologyEndemismmedia_common
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Sequence stratigraphy and paleo-oceanography of an open-marine mixed carbonate/siliciclastic succession (Late Jurassic, Southern Germany)

1992

The Late Jurassic epicontinental sea of South Germany protruded far to the North forming a wide bay which was rimmed by shallow-water platforms (Swiss and French Jura). This wide shelf is characterized by extensive downslope mud accumulations including siliceous sponge buildups. The bioherms are aligned along the more pericontinental parts of this shelf, which graded to the South into the Helvetic Basin of the Tethys Ocean.

Siliceous spongePaleontologyStratigraphyMarlLithostratigraphyPaleontologyGeologySequence stratigraphySiliciclasticSedimentologyBiostratigraphyTethys OceanGeologyFacies
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Molecular Mechanism of Spicule Formation in the Demosponge Suberites domuncula: Silicatein-Collagen-Myotrophin

2003

In living organisms four major groups of biominerals exist: (1) iron compounds, which are restricted primarily to Prokaryota; (2) calcium phosphates, found in Metazoa; (3) calcium carbonates, used by Prokaryota, Protozoa, Plantae, Fungi and Metazoa and (4) silica (opal) present in sponges and diatoms (reviewed in: Bengtson 1994; Baeuerlein 2000). It is surprising that the occurrence of silica as a major skeletal element is restricted to some Protozoa and to sponges (Porifera). The element silicon (Si) contributes to 28% of the earth crust and is - after oxygen - the second most abundant element on earth (Windholz 1983).

Siliceous spongeSpiculeeducation.field_of_studybiologychemistry.chemical_elementCalciumbiology.organism_classificationSuberites domunculaMyotrophinSponge spiculeDemospongeBiochemistrychemistryProtozoaeducation
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Sustainable Exploitation and Conservation of the Endemic Lake Baikal Sponge (Lubomirskia baicalensis) for Application in Nanobiotechnology

2009

The large sub-continent of Siberia is one of the richest mineral and oil resources on Earth. In its center, one region has gained prominence: Lake Baikal. It is one of the oldest, the deepest, and the lake with the greatest volume on Earth and is inhabited by more than 1,500 endemic species. It was Pallas (1771) who discovered in the lake a sponge species, Lubomirskia baicalensis (Porifera: Demospongiae), which dominates Lake Baikal's littoral-zone benthos. This sponge species has a distinguished, pronounced body plan which is composed of modules. The application of molecular biological and cell biological techniques has allowed an insight into the richness of the genomic regulatory systems…

Siliceous spongeSpongeMonophylySponge spiculebiologyBenthosEcologyBiodiversitySpecies richnessEndemismbiology.organism_classification
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The Unique Invention of the Siliceous Sponges: Their Enzymatically Made Bio-Silica Skeleton

2011

Sponges are sessile filter feeders that, among the metazoans, evolved first on Earth. In the two classes of the siliceous sponges (the Demospongiae and the Hexactinellida), the complex filigreed body is stabilized by an inorganic skeleton composed of amorphous silica providing them a distinct body shape and plan. It is proposed that the key innovation that allowed the earliest metazoans to form larger specimens was the enzyme silicatein. This enzyme is crucial for the formation of the siliceous skeleton. The first sponge fossils with body preservation were dated back prior to the “Precambrian-Cambrian” boundary [Vendian (610–545 Ma)/Ediacaran (542–580 Ma)]. A further molecule required for t…

Siliceous spongeSpongeMorphology (linguistics)Sponge spiculeChemical engineeringbiologyMineralogyOrganic matrixOrganic componentAmorphous silicabiology.organism_classificationSkeleton (computer programming)
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Biogenic Inorganic Polysilicates (Biosilica): Formation and Biomedical Applications

2013

The siliceous sponges, the demosponges and hexactinellid glass sponges, are unique in their ability to form biosilica structures with complex architectures through an enzyme-catalyzed mechanism. The biosilica skeleton of these sponges with its hierarchically structure and exceptional opto-mechanical properties has turned out to be an excellent model for the design of biomimetic nanomaterials with novel property combinations. In addition, biosilica shows morphogenetic activity that offers novel applications in the field of bone tissue engineering and repair. In recent years, much progress has been achieved towards the understanding of the principal enzymes, the silicateins that form the spon…

Siliceous spongeSpongeSponge spiculePolycondensation reactionbiologyHexactinellidNanobiotechnologyNanomedicineNanotechnologybiology.organism_classificationBone tissue engineering
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Enzymatically Synthesized Biosilica

2015

Structural biomaterials are hierarchically organized and biofabricated. Biosilica represents the main mineral component of the sponge skeletal elements, the spicules. We summarize recent data on the different levels of molecular, biological, and structural hierarchies controlling the synthesis of the picturesquely and intricately architectured spicules/skeletons.

Siliceous spongeSpongechemistry.chemical_compoundSponge spiculebiologyChemical engineeringChemistrySilicic acidbiology.organism_classification
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A cryptochrome-based photosensory system in the siliceous sponge Suberites domuncula (Demospongiae)

2010

Based on the light-reactive behavior of siliceous sponges, their intriguing quartz glass-based spicular system and the existence of a light-generating luciferase [Muller WEG et al. (2009) Cell Mol Life Sci 66, 537–552], a protein potentially involved in light reception has been identified, cloned and recombinantly expressed from the demosponge Suberites domuncula. Its sequence displays two domains characteristic of cryptochrome, the N-terminal photolyase-related region and the C-terminal FAD-binding domain. The expression level of S. domuncula cryptochrome depends on animal’s exposure to light and is highest in tissue regions rich in siliceous spicules; in the dark, no cryptochrome transcri…

Siliceous spongebiologyA proteinCell BiologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryCell biologySuberites domunculaDemospongeSponge spiculeLight sourceCryptochromeLuciferaseMolecular BiologyFEBS Journal
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Molecular Biomineralization: Toward an Understanding of the Biogenic Origin of Polymetallic Nodules, Seamount Crusts, and Hydrothermal Vents

2011

Polymetallic nodules and crusts, hydrothermal vents from the Deep Sea are economically interesting, since they contain alloying components, e.g., manganese or cobalt, that are used in the production of special steels; in addition, they contain rare metals applied for plasma screens, for magnets in hard disks, or in hybrid car motors. While hydrothermal vents can regenerate in weeks, polymetallic nodules and seamount crusts grow slowly. Even though the geochemical basis for the growth of the nodules and crusts has been well studied, the contribution of microorganisms to the formation of these minerals remained obscure. Recent HR-SEM (high-resolution scanning electron microscopy) analyses of …

Siliceous spongegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySeamountGeochemistryfood and beveragesBiologyDeep seaAbiogenic petroleum originPaleontologyAbiogenesisDissolutionBiomineralizationHydrothermal vent
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Apposition of silica lamellae during growth of spicules in the demosponge Suberites domuncula: Biological/biochemical studies and chemical/biomimetic…

2006

Recently it has been discovered that the formation of the siliceous spicules of Demospongiae proceeds enzymatically (via silicatein) and occurs matrix guided (on galectin strings). In addition, it could be demonstrated that silicatein, if immobilized onto inorganic surfaces, provides the template for the synthesis of biosilica. In order to understand the formation of spicules in the intact organism, detailed studies with primmorphs from Suberites domuncula have been performed. The demosponge spicules are formed from several silica lamellae which are concentrically arranged around the axial canal, harboring the axial filament composed of silicatein. Now we show that the appositional growth o…

Silicon dioxideNanotechnologyCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundDemospongeSponge spiculeBiomimeticsStructural BiologyAnimalsSclerocyteNanotubesPropylaminesbiologyVesicleSilanesEnzymes ImmobilizedSilicon Dioxidebiology.organism_classificationCathepsinsSuberites domunculaLamella (surface anatomy)chemistryMicroscopy Electron ScanningBiophysicsSuberitesSuberitesJournal of Structural Biology
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