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Arrested in Glass: Actin within Sophisticated Architectures of Biosilica in Sponges.

Hermann EhrlichMagdalena LuczakRustam ZiganshinIvan MikšíkMarcin WysokowskiPaul SimonIrena Baranowska-BosiackaPatrycja KupnickaAlexander EreskovskyRoberta GalliSergey DyshlovoyJonas FischerKonstantin R TabachnickIaroslav PetrenkoTeofil JesionowskiAnna LubkowskaMarek FiglerowiczViatcheslav N IvanenkoAdam P Summers
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2022)
Actin is a fundamental member of an ancient superfamily of structural intracellular proteins and plays a crucial role in cytoskeleton dynamics, ciliogenesis, phagocytosis, and force generation in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. It is shown that actin has another function in metazoans: patterning biosilica deposition, a role that has spanned over 500 million years. Species of glass sponges (Hexactinellida) and demosponges (Demospongiae), representatives of the first metazoans, with a broad diversity of skeletal structures with hierarchical architecture unchanged since the late Precambrian, are studied. By etching their skeletons, organic templates dominated by individual F-actin filaments, including branched fibers and the longest, thickest actin fiber bundles ever reported, are isolated. It is proposed that these actin-rich filaments are not the primary site of biosilicification, but this highly sophisticated and multi-scale form of biomineralization in metazoans is ptterned.
Keyphrases
  • cell migration
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry
  • transcription factor