Journal
NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN
Volume 92, Issue 3, Pages 134-138Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00114-004-0600-2
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In a preceding study it has been reported that the freshwater sponge Lubomirskia baicalensis, living in Lake Baikal ( East Siberia), is composed of spicules forming a characteristic pattern which follows radiate accretive growth. Here we report that the spicules are synthesized by the enzyme silicatein, a protein which is related to cathepsin L. The cDNAs for silicatein and the related cathepsin L were isolated and used as probes to show that the mRNA levels of silicatein in the bases of the spicule skeleton of the animals are low, while the mRNA level of cathepsin L in this region exceeds that of the growing zone. This is the first comprehensive study on the importance of the axial filament/silicatein as an essential structural and functional component determining the growth and stability of demosponge spicules.
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