4.4 Article

A role for primary cilia in coral calcification?

Journal

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH
Volume 383, Issue 3, Pages 1093-1102

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00441-020-03343-1

Keywords

Cilium; Biomineralization; Acetylated tubulin; Scanning electron microscopy; Calicoblastic ectoderm

Categories

Funding

  1. Government of the Principality of Monaco

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Cilia, evolutionarily conserved organelles found in diverse organisms, have different structures in the calcifying epithelium of corals, where they are considered to be primary cilia. This may have important implications for understanding the cellular physiology driving coral calcification and its sensitivity to the environment.
Cilia are evolutionarily conserved organelles that extend from the surface of cells and are found in diverse organisms from protozoans to multicellular organisms. Motile cilia play various biological functions by their beating motion, including mixing fluids and transporting food particles. Non-motile cilia act as sensors that signal cells about their microenvironment. In corals, cilia have been described in some of the cell layers but never in the calcifying epithelium, which is responsible for skeleton formation. In the present study, we used scanning electron microscopy and immunolabelling to investigate the cellular ciliature of the different tissue layers of the coral Stylophora pistillata, with a focus on the calcifying calicoblastic ectoderm. We show that the cilium of the calcifying cells is different from the cilium of the other cell layers. It is much shorter, and more importantly, its base is structurally distinct from the base observed in cilia of the other tissue layers. Based on these structural observations, we conclude that the cilium of the calcifying cells is a primary cilium. From what is known in other organisms, primary cilia are sensors that signal cells about their microenvironment. We discuss the implications of the presence of a primary cilium in the calcifying epithelium for our understanding of the cellular physiology driving coral calcification and its environmental sensitivity.

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