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Trichoplax

Trichoplax adhaerens is one of the four named species in the phylum Placozoa. The others are Hoilungia hongkongensis, Polyplacotoma mediterranea and Cladtertia collaboinventa. Placozoa is a basal group of multicellular animals, possible relatives of Cnidaria.[2] Trichoplax are very flat organisms commonly less than 4 mm in diameter,[3] lacking any organs or internal structures. They have two cellular layers: the top epitheloid layer is made of ciliated "cover cells" flattened toward the outside of the organism, and the bottom layer is made up of cylinder cells that possess cilia used in locomotion, and gland cells that lack cilia.[4] Between these layers is the fibre syncytium, a liquid-filled cavity strutted open by star-like fibres.

Trichoplax
Light microscope image of Trichoplax (specimen ca. 0.5 mm across)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Placozoa
Class: Uniplacotomia
Order: Trichoplacea
Tessler et al., 2022
Family: Trichoplacidae
Bütschli & Hatschek, 1905
Genus: Trichoplax
Schulze, 1883 [1]
Species:
T. adhaerens
Binomial name
Trichoplax adhaerens
Schulze, 1883
Synonyms
  • Trichoplax reptans

Trichoplax feed by absorbing food particles—mainly microbes—with their underside. They generally reproduce asexually, by dividing or budding, but can also reproduce sexually. Though Trichoplax has a small genome in comparison to other animals, nearly 87% of its 11,514 predicted protein-coding genes are identifiably similar to known genes in other animals.

Discovery edit

Trichoplax was discovered in 1883 by the German zoologist Franz Eilhard Schulze, in a seawater aquarium at the Zoological Institute in Graz, Austria. The generic name is derived from the classical Greek θρίξ (thrix), "hair", and πλάξ (plax), "plate". The specific epithet adhaerens is Latin meaning "adherent", reflecting its propensity to stick to the glass slides and pipettes used in its examination.[5]

Although from the very beginning most researchers who studied Trichoplax in any detail realized that it had no close relationship to other animal phyla, the zoologist Thilo Krumbach published a hypothesis that Trichoplax is a form of the planula larva of the anemone-like hydrozoan Eleutheria krohni in 1907. Although this was refuted in print by Schulze and others, Krumbach's analysis became the standard textbook explanation, and nothing was printed in zoological journals about Trichoplax until the 1960s. In the 1960s and 1970s a new interest among researchers led to acceptance of Placozoa as a new animal phylum. Among the new discoveries was study of the early phases of the animals' embryonic development and evidence that the animals that people had been studying are adults, not larvae. This newfound interest also included study of the organism in nature (as opposed to aquariums).[6]

Morphology edit

 
Ultrastructure of Trichoplax adhaerens. The upper epithelium (blue bar) with monociliated cells (light blue). The intermediate layer (green bar) consists of nonciliated fiber cells (labeled “fc” in light green). The lower epithelium (orange bar) is mostly made up of monociliated cylinder cells (light red). Scale bar is 2 μm.

Trichoplax generally has a thinly flattened, plate-like body in cross-section around half a millimetre, occasionally up to two or three millimetres. The body is usually only about 25 µm thick. Because they are so thin and fragile, and because the cilia which they use for locomotion are only loosely coordinated, they are constantly being split into two or three separate clones when their cilia moves in opposite directions, causing microfractures in the animal’s epithelium. One hypothesis is that the larger a motile animal lacking a nervous system is, the less coordinated its locomotion becomes, placing an upper limit on their possible size.[7][8] These colorlessly gray organisms are so thin they are transparent when illuminated from behind, and in most cases are barely visible to the naked eye. Like the single-celled amoebae, which they superficially resemble, they continually change their external shape. In addition, spherical phases occasionally form. These may facilitate movement to new habitats.

Trichoplax lacks tissues and organs; there is also no manifest body symmetry, so it is not possible to distinguish anterior from posterior or left from right. It is made up of a few thousand cells of six types in three distinct layers: dorsal epithelia cells and ventral epithelia cells, each with a single cilium ("monociliate"), ventral gland cells, syncytial fiber cells, lipophils, and crystal cells (each containing a birefringent crystal, arrayed around the rim). Lacking sensory and muscle cells, it moves using cilia on its external surface.[9] The collective movements of the cilia are completely coordinated by mechanical interactions.[10]

Signal processing edit

There are no neurons present, but in the absence of a nervous system the animal uses short chains of amino acids known as peptides for cell communication, in a manner resembling the way animals with neurons use neuropeptides for the same purpose. These specialized cells are called peptidergic cells, but unlike neurons they don't use electrical impulses and their messaging is restricted to sending signals to other nearby cells only, as they're unable to both send and receive signals.[11] Individual cells contain and secrete a variety of small peptides, made up of between four and 20 amino acids, which are detected by neighbouring cells. Each peptide can be used individually to send a signal to other cells, but also sequentially or together in different combinations, creating a huge number a different types of signals. This allows for a relatively complex behavioural repertoire, including behaviours such as "crinkling", turning, flattening, and internal "churning".[12] The genome of Trichoplax codes for eighty-five neurotransmitter receptors, more than in any other sequenced animal.[13]

Epitheloid edit

Both structurally and functionally, it is possible to distinguish a back or dorsal side from a belly or ventral side in Trichoplax adhaerens. Both consist of a single layer of cells coated on the outside with slime and are reminiscent of epithelial tissue, primarily due to the junctions—belt desmosomes—between the cells. In contrast to true epithelium, however, the cell layers of the Placozoa possess no basal lamina, which refers to a thin layer of extracellular material underlying epithelium that stiffens it and separates it from the body's interior. The absence of this structure, which is otherwise to be found in all animals except the sponges, can be explained in terms of function: a rigid separating layer would make the amoeboid changes in the shape of Trichoplax adhaerens impossible. Instead of an epithelium, therefore, we speak of an epitheloid in the Placozoa.

A mature individual consists of up to a thousand[clarification needed] cells that can be divided into four different cell types. The monociliated cells of the dorsal epitheloid are flattened and contain lipid bodies. The cells on the ventral side likewise possess a single cilium, while their elongated columnar shape, with a small cross section at the surface, packs them very closely together, causing the cilia to be very closely spaced on the ventral side and to form a ciliated "crawling sole". Interspersed among these ventral epithlioid cells are unciliated gland cells thought to be capable of synthesizing digestive enzymes.

Fibre syncytium edit

Between the two layers of cells is a liquid-filled interior space, which, except for the immediate zones of contact with the ventral and dorsal sides, is pervaded by a star-shaped fibre syncytium: a fibrous network that consists essentially of a single cell but contains numerous nuclei that, while separated by internal crosswalls (septa), do not have true cell membranes between them. Similar structures are also found in the sponges (Porifera) and many fungi.

On both sides of the septa are liquid-filled capsules that cause the septa to resemble synapses, i.e. nerve-cell junctions that occur in fully expressed form only in animals with tissues (Eumetazoa). Striking accumulations of calcium ions, which may have a function related to the propagation of stimuli, likewise suggest a possible role as protosynapses. This view is supported by the fact that fluorescent antibodies against cnidarian neurotransmitters, i.e. precisely those signal carriers that are transferred in synapses, bind in high concentrations in certain cells of Trichoplax adhaerens, and thus indicate the existence of comparable substances in the Placozoa. The fibre syncytium also contains molecules of actin and probably also of myosin, which occur in the muscle cells of eumetazoans [citation needed]. In the placozoans, they ensure that the individual fibres can relax or contract and thus help determine the animals' shape.

In this way, the fibre syncytium assumes the functions of nerve and muscle tissues. Moreover, at least a portion of digestion occurs here. On the other hand, no gelatinous extracellular matrix exists of the kind observed, in mesoglea, in cnidarians and ctenophores.

Pluripotent cells, which can differentiate into other cell types, have not yet been demonstrated unambiguously in T. adhaerens, in contrast to the case of the Eumetazoa. The conventional view is that dorsal and ventral epithelioid cells arise only from other cells of the same type.

Genetics edit

The Trichoplax genome contains about 98 million base pairs and 11,514 predicted protein-coding genes.[14]

All nuclei of placozoan cells contain six pairs[verification needed] of chromosomes that are only about two to three micrometres in size. Three pairs are metacentric, meaning that the centromere, the attachment point for the spindle fibers in cell division, is located at the center, or acrocentric, with the centromere at an extreme end of each chromosome. The cells of the fiber syncytium can be tetraploid, i.e. contain a quadruple complement of chromosomes.

A single complement of chromosomes in Trichoplax adhaerens contains a total of fewer than fifty million base pairs and thus forms the smallest animal genome; the number of base pairs in the intestinal bacterium Escherichia coli is smaller by a factor of only ten.

The genetic complement of Trichoplax adhaerens has not yet been very well researched; it has, however, already been possible to identify several genes, such as Brachyury and TBX2/TBX3, which are homologous to corresponding base-pair sequences in eumetazoans. Of particular significance is Trox-2, a placozoan gene known under the name Cnox-2 in cnidarians and as Gsx in the bilaterally symmetrical Bilateria. As a homeobox or Hox gene it plays a role in organization and differentiation along the axis of symmetry in the embryonic development of eumetazoans; in cnidarians, it appears to determine the position of mouth-facing (oral) and opposite-facing (aboral) sides of the organism. Since placozoans possess no axes of symmetry, exactly where the gene is transcribed in the body of Trichoplax is of special interest. Antibody studies have been able to show that the gene's product occurs only in the transition zones of the dorsal and ventral sides, perhaps in a fifth cell type that has not yet been characterized. It is not yet clear whether these cells, contrary to traditional views, are stem cells, which play a role in cell differentiation. In any case, Trox-2 can be considered a possible candidate for a proto-Hox gene, from which the other genes in this important family could have arisen through gene duplication and variation.

Initially, molecular-biology methods were applied unsuccessfully to test the various theories regarding Placozoa's position in the Metazoa system. No clarification was achieved with standard markers such as 18S rDNA/RNA: the marker sequence was apparently "garbled", i.e. rendered uninformative as the result of many mutations. Nevertheless, this negative result supported the suspicion that Trichoplax might represent an extremely primitive lineage of metazoans, since a very long period of time had to be assumed for the accumulation of so many mutations.

Of the 11,514 genes identified in the six chromosomes of Trichoplax, 87% are identifiably similar to genes in cnidarians and bilaterians. In those Trichoplax genes for which equivalent genes can be identified in the human genome, over 80% of the introns (the regions within genes that are removed from RNA molecules before their sequences are translated in protein synthesis) are found in the same location as in the corresponding human genes. The arrangement of genes in groups on chromosomes is also conserved between the Trichoplax and human genomes. This contrasts to other model systems such as fruit flies and soil nematodes that have experienced a paring down of non-coding regions and a loss of the ancestral genome organizations.[15]

Relationship with animals edit

The phylogenetic relationship between Trichoplax and other animals has been debated for some time. A variety of hypotheses have been advanced based on the few morphological characteristics of this simple organism that could be identified. More recently, a comparison of the Trichoplax mitochondrial genome suggested that Trichoplax is a basal metazoan—less closely related to all other animals including sponges than they are to each other.[16] This implies that the Placozoa would have arisen relatively soon after the evolutionary transition from unicellular to multicellular forms. But an even more recent analysis of the much larger Trichoplax nuclear genome instead supports the hypothesis that Trichoplax is a basal eumetazoan, that is, more closely related to Cnidaria and other animals than any of those animals are to sponges.[14] This is consistent with the presence in Trichoplax of cell layers reminiscent of epithelial tissue (see above).

Distribution and habitat edit

Trichoplax was first discovered on the walls of a marine aquarium, and is rarely observed in its natural habitat.[17] Trichoplax has been collected, among other places, in the Red Sea, the Mediterranean, and the Caribbean, off Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, Japan, Vietnam, Brazil, and Papua New Guinea, and on the Great Barrier Reef off the east coast of Australia.[18]

Field specimens tend to be found in the coastal tidal zones of tropical and subtropical seas, on such substrates as the trunks and roots of mangroves, shells of molluscs, fragments of stony corals or simply on pieces of rock. One study was able to detect seasonal population fluctuations, the causes of which have not yet been deduced.

Feeding and symbionts edit

 
Extracorporeal food uptake by Trichoplax adhaerens

Trichoplax adhaerens feeds on small algae, particularly on green algae (Chlorophyta) of the genus Chlorella, cryptomonads (Cryptophyta) of the genera Cryptomonas and Rhodomonas, and blue-green bacteria (Cyanobacteria) such as Phormidium inundatum, but also on detritus from other organisms. In feeding, one or several small pockets form around particles of nutrients on the ventral side, into which digestive enzymes are released by the gland cells; the organisms thus develop a temporary "external stomach", so to speak. The enclosed nutrients are then taken up by pinocytosis ("cell-drinking") by the ciliated cells located on the ventral surface.

Entire single-celled organisms can also be ingested through the upper epitheloid (that is, the "dorsal surface" of the animal). This mode of feeding could be unique in the animal kingdom: the particles, collected in a slime layer, are drawn through the intercellular gaps (cellular interstices) of the epitheloid by the fibre cells and then digested by phagocytosis ("cell-eating"). Such "collecting" of nutrient particles through an intact tegument is only possible because some "insulating" elements (specifically, a basal lamina under the epitheloid and certain types of cell-cell junctions) are not present in the Placozoa.

When the concentrations of algae are high the animals are more likely to engage in social feeding behavior.[19]

Not all bacteria in the interior of Placozoa are digested as food: in the endoplasmic reticulum, an organelle of the fibre syncytium, bacteria are frequently found that appear to live in symbiosis with Trichoplax adhaerens.[20] These endosymbionts, which are no longer able to survive outside its host, are transferred from one generation to the next through both vegetative and sexual reproduction.[21]

Locomotion edit

Trichoplax movement

Placozoa can move in two different ways on solid surfaces: first, their ciliated crawling sole lets them glide slowly across the substrate; second, they can change location by modifying their body shape, as an amoeba does. These movements are not centrally coordinated, since no muscle or nerve tissues exist. It can happen that an individual moves simultaneously in two different directions and consequently divides into two parts.[22]

It has been possible to demonstrate a close connection between body shape and the speed of locomotion, which is also a function of available food:

  • At low nutrient density, the spread-out area fluctuates slightly but irregularly; speed remains relatively constant at about 15 micrometres per second.
  • If nutrient density is high, however, the area covered oscillates with a stable period of about 8 minutes, in which the greatest extent reached by the organism can be as much as twice the smallest. Its speed, which remains consistently below 5 micrometres per second, varies with the same period. In this case, a high speed always corresponds to a reduced area, and vice versa.

Since the transition is not smooth but happens abruptly, the two modes of extension can be very clearly separated from one another. The following is a qualitative explanation of the animal's behavior:

  • At low nutrient density, Trichoplax maintains a constant speed in order to uncover food sources without wasting time.
  • Once such a source is identified by high nutrient density, the organism increases its area in regular increments and thereby enlarges the surface in contact with substrate. This enlarges the surface through which nutrients can be ingested. The animal reduces its speed at the same time in order to actually consume all of the available food.
  • Once this is nearly completed, Trichoplax reduces its area again to move on. Because food sources such as algal mats are often relatively extensive, it is reasonable for such an animal to stop moving after a brief period in order to flatten out again and absorb nutrients. Thus Trichoplax progresses relatively slowly in this phase.

The actual direction in which Trichoplax moves each time is random: if we measure how fast an individual animal moves away from an arbitrary starting point, we find a linear relationship between elapsed time and mean square distance between starting point and present location. Such a relationship is also characteristic of random Brownian motion of molecules, which thus can serve as a model for locomotion in the Placozoa.

Small animals are also capable of swimming actively with the aid of their cilia. As soon as they come into contact with a possible substrate, a dorsoventral response occurs: the dorsal cilia continue to beat, whereas the cilia of ventral cells stop their rhythmic beating. At the same time, the ventral surface tries to make contact with the substrate; small protrusions and invaginations, the microvilli found on the surface of the columnar cells, help in attaching to the substrate via their adhesive action.

Using T. adhaerens as a model, were described 0.02–0.002 Hz oscillations in locomotory and feeding patterns as evidence of complex multicellular integration; and showed their dependence on the endogenous secretion of signal molecules. Evolutionary conserved low-molecular-weight transmitters (glutamate, aspartate, glycine, GABA, and ATP) acted as coordinators of distinct locomotory and feeding patterns. Specifically, L-glutamate induced and partially mimicked endogenous feeding cycles, whereas glycine and GABA suppressed feeding. ATP-modified feeding is complex, first causing feeding-like cycles and then suppressing feeding. Trichoplax locomotion was modulated by glycine, GABA, and, surprisingly, by animals’ own mucus trails. Mucus triples locomotory speed compared to clean substrates. Glycine and GABA increased the frequency of turns. [23]

Regeneration edit

A notable characteristic of the Placozoa is that they can regenerate themselves from extremely small groups of cells. Even when large portions of the organism are removed in the laboratory, a complete animal develops again from the remainder. It is also possible to rub Trichoplax adhaerens through a strainer in such a manner that individual cells are not destroyed but are separated from one another to a large extent. In the test tube they then find their way back together again to form complete organisms. If this procedure is performed on several previously strained individuals simultaneously, the same thing occurs. In this case, however, cells that previously belonged to a particular individual can suddenly show up as part of another.

Reproduction edit

The Placozoa normally propagate asexually, dividing down the middle to produce two (or sometimes, three) roughly equal-sized daughters. These remain loosely connected[clarification needed] for a while after fission. More rarely, budding processes are observed: spherules of cells separate from the dorsal surface; each of these combines all known cell types and subsequently grows into an individual on its own.[citation needed]

Sexual reproduction is thought to be triggered by excessive population density. As a result, the animals absorb liquid, begin to swell, and separate from the substrate so that they float freely in the water. In the protected interior space, the ventral cells form an ovum surrounded by a special envelope, the fertilisation membrane; the ovum is supplied with nutrients by the surrounding syncytium, allowing energy-rich yolk to accumulate in its interior. Once maturation of the ovum is complete, the rest of the animal degenerates, liberating the ovum itself. Small, unciliated cells that form at the same time are interpreted to be spermatozoa. It has not yet been possible to observe fertilisation itself; the existence of the fertilisation membrane is currently taken to be evidence, however, that it has taken place.[citation needed]

Putative eggs have been observed, but they degrade, typically at the 32–64 cell stage. Neither embryonic development nor sperm have been observed. Despite lack of observation of sexual reproduction in the lab, the genetic structure of the populations in the wild is compatible with the sexual reproduction mode, at least for species of the analysed genotype H5.[24]

Usually even before its liberation, the ovum initiates cleavage processes in which it becomes completely pinched through at the middle. A ball of cells characteristic of animals, the blastula, is ultimately produced in this manner, with a maximum of 256 cells. Development beyond this 256-cell stage has not yet been observed.[25]

Trichoplax lack a homologue of the Boule protein that appears to be ubiquitous and conserved in males of all species of other animals tested.[26] If its absence implies the species has no males, then perhaps its "sexual" reproduction may be a case of the above-described process of regeneration, combining cells from two separate organisms into one.[citation needed][original research?]

Due to the possibility of its cloning itself by asexual propagation without limit, the life span of Placozoa is infinite; in the laboratory, several lines descended from a single organism have been maintained in culture for an average of 20 years without the occurrence of sexual processes.[citation needed]

Role as a model organism edit

Long ignored as an exotic, marginal phenomenon, Trichoplax adhaerens is today viewed as a potential biological model organism.[citation needed] In particular, research is needed to determine how a group of cells that cannot be considered full-fledged epithelial tissue organizes itself, how locomotion and coordination occur in the absence of true muscle and nerve tissue, and how the absence of a concrete body axis affects the animal's biology. At the genetic level, the way in which Trichoplax adhaerens protects against damage to its genome needs to be studied, particularly with regard to the existence of special DNA-repair processes. T. adhaerens can tolerate high levels of radiation damage that are lethal to other animals.[27] Tolerance to X-ray exposure was found to depend on expression of genes involved in DNA repair and apoptosis including the gene Mdm2.[27] Complete decoding of the genome should also clarify the placozoans' place in evolution, which continues to be controversial.

Its ability to fight cancer through a combination of aggressive DNA repair and ejection of damaged cells makes it a promising organism for cancer research.[28]

In addition to basic research, this animal could also be suitable for studying wound-healing and regeneration processes; as yet unidentified metabolic products should be researched. Finally, Trichoplax adhaerens is also being considered as an animal model for testing compounds and antibacterial drugs.[29]

Systematics edit

Francesco Saverio Monticelli described another species in 1893, which he found in the waters around Naples, naming it Treptoplax reptans. However, it has not been observed since 1896, and most zoologists today doubt its existence.[citation needed]

Significant genetic differences have been observed between collected specimens matching the morphological description of T. adhaerens, suggesting that it may be a cryptic species complex. At least eight distinct genotypes (marked from H1 to H8) have been observed.[30]

Because great genetic differences often occur between representatives of Trichoplax adhaerens, differences that in other taxa would result in their being spread among different genera, it is currently unclear whether the single species, based on morphological criteria, does not actually correspond to a group of cryptospecies, i.e. species that are not outwardly distinguishable from one another. Distribution of the genetic variants is not a function of geography: some variants are found in multiple regions (e.g. Pacific, Caribbean and Red Sea). At the same time, very different genetic variants can be isolated from the same habitat.[citation needed]

References edit

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  28. ^ Microorganism sheds new light on cancer resistance
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Further reading edit

  • Edward E. Ruppert, R. S. Fox, R. D. Barnes: Invertebrate Zoology – a functional evolutionary approach. ch. 5. Brooks/Cole, London 2004 (7th ed.), p. 94, ISBN 0-03-025982-7
  • Richard C. Brusca, G. J. Brusca: Invertebrates. ch. 7. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland Mass 2002 (2nd ed.), p. 210, ISBN 0-87893-097-3

Scientific literature edit

  • Schierwater, B.; Eitel, M.; Jakob, W.; Osigus, J.; Hadrys, H.; Dellaporta, L.; Kolokotronis, O.; Desalle, R. (January 2009). Penny, David (ed.). "Concatenated Analysis Sheds Light on Early Metazoan Evolution and Fuels a Modern "Urmetazoon" Hypothesis". PLOS Biology. 7 (1): e20. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000020. ISSN 1544-9173. PMC 2631068. PMID 19175291.
  • V. J. Birstein: "On the Karyotype of Trichoplax sp. (Placozoa)." in: Biologisches Zentralblatt. Fischer, Jena – Stuttgart 108 (1989), p. 63, ISSN 0006-3304
  • K. G. Grell, A. Ruthmann: "Placozoa." in: F. W. Harrison, J. A. Westfall (eds.): Microscopic Anatomy of Invertebrates. Vol. 2. Wiley-Liss, New York 1991, p. 13, ISBN 0-471-56224-6
  • W. Jakob, S. Sagasser, S. Dellaporta, P. Holland, K. Kuhn, B. Schierwater: "The Trox-2 Hox/Para Hox gene of Trichoplax (Placozoa) marks an epithelial boundary." in: Development Genes and Evolution. Springer, Berlin 214 (2004), p. 170, ISSN 0949-944X
  • Y. K. Maruyama: "Occurrence in the Field of a Long-Term, Year-Round Stable Population of Placozoa." in: The Biological Bulletin. Laboratory, Woods Hole Mass 206:1 (2004), p. 55.
  • T. Syed, B. Schierwater: "The evolution of the Placozoa – A new morphological model." in: Senckenbergiana Lethaea Schweizerbart, Stuttgart 82:1 (2002), p. 315, ISSN 0037-2110
  • P. Schubert: "Trichoplax adhaerens (Phylum Placozoa) has cells that react with antibodies against the neuropeptide RFAmide." in: Acta Zoologica. Blackwell Science, Oxford 74:2, (1993), p. 115, ISSN 0001-7272
  • T. Ueda, S. Koga, Y. K. Marayama: "Dynamic patterns in the locomotion and feeding behaviour by the placozoan Trichoplax adhaerens." in: BioSystems. North-Holland Publ., Amsterdam 54 (1999), p. 65, ISSN 0303-2647

First descriptions edit

Placozoa
  • K. G. Grell: "Trichoplax adhaerens, F. E. Schulze und die Entstehung der Metazoen." ("Trichoplax adhaerens, F.E. Schulze, and the evolution of the metazoans") in: Naturwissenschaftliche Rundschau. Wiss. Verl.-Ges., Stuttgart 24 (1971), p. 160, ISSN 0028-1050
Treptoplax reptans
  • F. S. Monticelli: "Treptoplax reptans n. g., n. s." in: Rendiconti / Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Roma, Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rome 2:5 (1893), p. 39, ISSN 0001-4435
Trichoplax adhaerens
  • F. E. Schulze: "Trichoplax adhaerens n. g., n. s." in: Zoologischer Anzeiger. Elsevier, Amsterdam-Jena 6 (1883), p. 92, ISSN 0044-5231

External links edit

  • Tree of life
  • Observation report with image
  • Brief description with image
  • UPI: "Scientists study genome of the Trichoplax", summary of a report in Nature
  • JGI/DOE: "Genome of Simplest Animal Reveals Ancient Lineage, Confounding Array of Complex Capabilities"
  • Video of Trichoplax in motion

trichoplax, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, september, 2014, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, adh. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Trichoplax adhaerens is one of the four named species in the phylum Placozoa The others are Hoilungia hongkongensis Polyplacotoma mediterranea and Cladtertia collaboinventa Placozoa is a basal group of multicellular animals possible relatives of Cnidaria 2 Trichoplax are very flat organisms commonly less than 4 mm in diameter 3 lacking any organs or internal structures They have two cellular layers the top epitheloid layer is made of ciliated cover cells flattened toward the outside of the organism and the bottom layer is made up of cylinder cells that possess cilia used in locomotion and gland cells that lack cilia 4 Between these layers is the fibre syncytium a liquid filled cavity strutted open by star like fibres Trichoplax Light microscope image of Trichoplax specimen ca 0 5 mm across Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Placozoa Class Uniplacotomia Order TrichoplaceaTessler et al 2022 Family TrichoplacidaeButschli amp Hatschek 1905 Genus TrichoplaxSchulze 1883 1 Species T adhaerens Binomial name Trichoplax adhaerensSchulze 1883 Synonyms Trichoplax reptans Trichoplax feed by absorbing food particles mainly microbes with their underside They generally reproduce asexually by dividing or budding but can also reproduce sexually Though Trichoplax has a small genome in comparison to other animals nearly 87 of its 11 514 predicted protein coding genes are identifiably similar to known genes in other animals Contents 1 Discovery 2 Morphology 3 Signal processing 4 Epitheloid 5 Fibre syncytium 6 Genetics 7 Relationship with animals 8 Distribution and habitat 9 Feeding and symbionts 10 Locomotion 11 Regeneration 12 Reproduction 13 Role as a model organism 14 Systematics 15 References 16 Further reading 16 1 Scientific literature 16 2 First descriptions 17 External linksDiscovery editTrichoplax was discovered in 1883 by the German zoologist Franz Eilhard Schulze in a seawater aquarium at the Zoological Institute in Graz Austria The generic name is derived from the classical Greek 8ri3 thrix hair and pla3 plax plate The specific epithet adhaerens is Latin meaning adherent reflecting its propensity to stick to the glass slides and pipettes used in its examination 5 Although from the very beginning most researchers who studied Trichoplax in any detail realized that it had no close relationship to other animal phyla the zoologist Thilo Krumbach published a hypothesis that Trichoplax is a form of the planula larva of the anemone like hydrozoan Eleutheria krohni in 1907 Although this was refuted in print by Schulze and others Krumbach s analysis became the standard textbook explanation and nothing was printed in zoological journals about Trichoplax until the 1960s In the 1960s and 1970s a new interest among researchers led to acceptance of Placozoa as a new animal phylum Among the new discoveries was study of the early phases of the animals embryonic development and evidence that the animals that people had been studying are adults not larvae This newfound interest also included study of the organism in nature as opposed to aquariums 6 Morphology edit nbsp Ultrastructure of Trichoplax adhaerens The upper epithelium blue bar with monociliated cells light blue The intermediate layer green bar consists of nonciliated fiber cells labeled fc in light green The lower epithelium orange bar is mostly made up of monociliated cylinder cells light red Scale bar is 2 mm Trichoplax generally has a thinly flattened plate like body in cross section around half a millimetre occasionally up to two or three millimetres The body is usually only about 25 µm thick Because they are so thin and fragile and because the cilia which they use for locomotion are only loosely coordinated they are constantly being split into two or three separate clones when their cilia moves in opposite directions causing microfractures in the animal s epithelium One hypothesis is that the larger a motile animal lacking a nervous system is the less coordinated its locomotion becomes placing an upper limit on their possible size 7 8 These colorlessly gray organisms are so thin they are transparent when illuminated from behind and in most cases are barely visible to the naked eye Like the single celled amoebae which they superficially resemble they continually change their external shape In addition spherical phases occasionally form These may facilitate movement to new habitats Trichoplax lacks tissues and organs there is also no manifest body symmetry so it is not possible to distinguish anterior from posterior or left from right It is made up of a few thousand cells of six types in three distinct layers dorsal epithelia cells and ventral epithelia cells each with a single cilium monociliate ventral gland cells syncytial fiber cells lipophils and crystal cells each containing a birefringent crystal arrayed around the rim Lacking sensory and muscle cells it moves using cilia on its external surface 9 The collective movements of the cilia are completely coordinated by mechanical interactions 10 Signal processing editThere are no neurons present but in the absence of a nervous system the animal uses short chains of amino acids known as peptides for cell communication in a manner resembling the way animals with neurons use neuropeptides for the same purpose These specialized cells are called peptidergic cells but unlike neurons they don t use electrical impulses and their messaging is restricted to sending signals to other nearby cells only as they re unable to both send and receive signals 11 Individual cells contain and secrete a variety of small peptides made up of between four and 20 amino acids which are detected by neighbouring cells Each peptide can be used individually to send a signal to other cells but also sequentially or together in different combinations creating a huge number a different types of signals This allows for a relatively complex behavioural repertoire including behaviours such as crinkling turning flattening and internal churning 12 The genome of Trichoplax codes for eighty five neurotransmitter receptors more than in any other sequenced animal 13 Epitheloid editBoth structurally and functionally it is possible to distinguish a back or dorsal side from a belly or ventral side in Trichoplax adhaerens Both consist of a single layer of cells coated on the outside with slime and are reminiscent of epithelial tissue primarily due to the junctions belt desmosomes between the cells In contrast to true epithelium however the cell layers of the Placozoa possess no basal lamina which refers to a thin layer of extracellular material underlying epithelium that stiffens it and separates it from the body s interior The absence of this structure which is otherwise to be found in all animals except the sponges can be explained in terms of function a rigid separating layer would make the amoeboid changes in the shape of Trichoplax adhaerens impossible Instead of an epithelium therefore we speak of an epitheloid in the Placozoa A mature individual consists of up to a thousand clarification needed cells that can be divided into four different cell types The monociliated cells of the dorsal epitheloid are flattened and contain lipid bodies The cells on the ventral side likewise possess a single cilium while their elongated columnar shape with a small cross section at the surface packs them very closely together causing the cilia to be very closely spaced on the ventral side and to form a ciliated crawling sole Interspersed among these ventral epithlioid cells are unciliated gland cells thought to be capable of synthesizing digestive enzymes Fibre syncytium editBetween the two layers of cells is a liquid filled interior space which except for the immediate zones of contact with the ventral and dorsal sides is pervaded by a star shaped fibre syncytium a fibrous network that consists essentially of a single cell but contains numerous nuclei that while separated by internal crosswalls septa do not have true cell membranes between them Similar structures are also found in the sponges Porifera and many fungi On both sides of the septa are liquid filled capsules that cause the septa to resemble synapses i e nerve cell junctions that occur in fully expressed form only in animals with tissues Eumetazoa Striking accumulations of calcium ions which may have a function related to the propagation of stimuli likewise suggest a possible role as protosynapses This view is supported by the fact that fluorescent antibodies against cnidarian neurotransmitters i e precisely those signal carriers that are transferred in synapses bind in high concentrations in certain cells of Trichoplax adhaerens and thus indicate the existence of comparable substances in the Placozoa The fibre syncytium also contains molecules of actin and probably also of myosin which occur in the muscle cells of eumetazoans citation needed In the placozoans they ensure that the individual fibres can relax or contract and thus help determine the animals shape In this way the fibre syncytium assumes the functions of nerve and muscle tissues Moreover at least a portion of digestion occurs here On the other hand no gelatinous extracellular matrix exists of the kind observed in mesoglea in cnidarians and ctenophores Pluripotent cells which can differentiate into other cell types have not yet been demonstrated unambiguously in T adhaerens in contrast to the case of the Eumetazoa The conventional view is that dorsal and ventral epithelioid cells arise only from other cells of the same type Genetics editThe Trichoplax genome contains about 98 million base pairs and 11 514 predicted protein coding genes 14 All nuclei of placozoan cells contain six pairs verification needed of chromosomes that are only about two to three micrometres in size Three pairs are metacentric meaning that the centromere the attachment point for the spindle fibers in cell division is located at the center or acrocentric with the centromere at an extreme end of each chromosome The cells of the fiber syncytium can be tetraploid i e contain a quadruple complement of chromosomes A single complement of chromosomes in Trichoplax adhaerens contains a total of fewer than fifty million base pairs and thus forms the smallest animal genome the number of base pairs in the intestinal bacterium Escherichia coli is smaller by a factor of only ten The genetic complement of Trichoplax adhaerens has not yet been very well researched it has however already been possible to identify several genes such as Brachyury and TBX2 TBX3 which are homologous to corresponding base pair sequences in eumetazoans Of particular significance is Trox 2 a placozoan gene known under the name Cnox 2 in cnidarians and as Gsx in the bilaterally symmetrical Bilateria As a homeobox or Hox gene it plays a role in organization and differentiation along the axis of symmetry in the embryonic development of eumetazoans in cnidarians it appears to determine the position of mouth facing oral and opposite facing aboral sides of the organism Since placozoans possess no axes of symmetry exactly where the gene is transcribed in the body of Trichoplax is of special interest Antibody studies have been able to show that the gene s product occurs only in the transition zones of the dorsal and ventral sides perhaps in a fifth cell type that has not yet been characterized It is not yet clear whether these cells contrary to traditional views are stem cells which play a role in cell differentiation In any case Trox 2 can be considered a possible candidate for a proto Hox gene from which the other genes in this important family could have arisen through gene duplication and variation Initially molecular biology methods were applied unsuccessfully to test the various theories regarding Placozoa s position in the Metazoa system No clarification was achieved with standard markers such as 18S rDNA RNA the marker sequence was apparently garbled i e rendered uninformative as the result of many mutations Nevertheless this negative result supported the suspicion that Trichoplax might represent an extremely primitive lineage of metazoans since a very long period of time had to be assumed for the accumulation of so many mutations Of the 11 514 genes identified in the six chromosomes of Trichoplax 87 are identifiably similar to genes in cnidarians and bilaterians In those Trichoplax genes for which equivalent genes can be identified in the human genome over 80 of the introns the regions within genes that are removed from RNA molecules before their sequences are translated in protein synthesis are found in the same location as in the corresponding human genes The arrangement of genes in groups on chromosomes is also conserved between the Trichoplax and human genomes This contrasts to other model systems such as fruit flies and soil nematodes that have experienced a paring down of non coding regions and a loss of the ancestral genome organizations 15 Relationship with animals editThe phylogenetic relationship between Trichoplax and other animals has been debated for some time A variety of hypotheses have been advanced based on the few morphological characteristics of this simple organism that could be identified More recently a comparison of the Trichoplax mitochondrial genome suggested that Trichoplax is a basal metazoan less closely related to all other animals including sponges than they are to each other 16 This implies that the Placozoa would have arisen relatively soon after the evolutionary transition from unicellular to multicellular forms But an even more recent analysis of the much larger Trichoplax nuclear genome instead supports the hypothesis that Trichoplax is a basal eumetazoan that is more closely related to Cnidaria and other animals than any of those animals are to sponges 14 This is consistent with the presence in Trichoplax of cell layers reminiscent of epithelial tissue see above Distribution and habitat editTrichoplax was first discovered on the walls of a marine aquarium and is rarely observed in its natural habitat 17 Trichoplax has been collected among other places in the Red Sea the Mediterranean and the Caribbean off Hawaii Guam Samoa Japan Vietnam Brazil and Papua New Guinea and on the Great Barrier Reef off the east coast of Australia 18 Field specimens tend to be found in the coastal tidal zones of tropical and subtropical seas on such substrates as the trunks and roots of mangroves shells of molluscs fragments of stony corals or simply on pieces of rock One study was able to detect seasonal population fluctuations the causes of which have not yet been deduced Feeding and symbionts edit nbsp Extracorporeal food uptake by Trichoplax adhaerens Trichoplax adhaerens feeds on small algae particularly on green algae Chlorophyta of the genus Chlorella cryptomonads Cryptophyta of the genera Cryptomonas and Rhodomonas and blue green bacteria Cyanobacteria such as Phormidium inundatum but also on detritus from other organisms In feeding one or several small pockets form around particles of nutrients on the ventral side into which digestive enzymes are released by the gland cells the organisms thus develop a temporary external stomach so to speak The enclosed nutrients are then taken up by pinocytosis cell drinking by the ciliated cells located on the ventral surface Entire single celled organisms can also be ingested through the upper epitheloid that is the dorsal surface of the animal This mode of feeding could be unique in the animal kingdom the particles collected in a slime layer are drawn through the intercellular gaps cellular interstices of the epitheloid by the fibre cells and then digested by phagocytosis cell eating Such collecting of nutrient particles through an intact tegument is only possible because some insulating elements specifically a basal lamina under the epitheloid and certain types of cell cell junctions are not present in the Placozoa When the concentrations of algae are high the animals are more likely to engage in social feeding behavior 19 Not all bacteria in the interior of Placozoa are digested as food in the endoplasmic reticulum an organelle of the fibre syncytium bacteria are frequently found that appear to live in symbiosis with Trichoplax adhaerens 20 These endosymbionts which are no longer able to survive outside its host are transferred from one generation to the next through both vegetative and sexual reproduction 21 Locomotion edit source source source source Trichoplax movement Placozoa can move in two different ways on solid surfaces first their ciliated crawling sole lets them glide slowly across the substrate second they can change location by modifying their body shape as an amoeba does These movements are not centrally coordinated since no muscle or nerve tissues exist It can happen that an individual moves simultaneously in two different directions and consequently divides into two parts 22 It has been possible to demonstrate a close connection between body shape and the speed of locomotion which is also a function of available food At low nutrient density the spread out area fluctuates slightly but irregularly speed remains relatively constant at about 15 micrometres per second If nutrient density is high however the area covered oscillates with a stable period of about 8 minutes in which the greatest extent reached by the organism can be as much as twice the smallest Its speed which remains consistently below 5 micrometres per second varies with the same period In this case a high speed always corresponds to a reduced area and vice versa Since the transition is not smooth but happens abruptly the two modes of extension can be very clearly separated from one another The following is a qualitative explanation of the animal s behavior At low nutrient density Trichoplax maintains a constant speed in order to uncover food sources without wasting time Once such a source is identified by high nutrient density the organism increases its area in regular increments and thereby enlarges the surface in contact with substrate This enlarges the surface through which nutrients can be ingested The animal reduces its speed at the same time in order to actually consume all of the available food Once this is nearly completed Trichoplax reduces its area again to move on Because food sources such as algal mats are often relatively extensive it is reasonable for such an animal to stop moving after a brief period in order to flatten out again and absorb nutrients Thus Trichoplax progresses relatively slowly in this phase The actual direction in which Trichoplax moves each time is random if we measure how fast an individual animal moves away from an arbitrary starting point we find a linear relationship between elapsed time and mean square distance between starting point and present location Such a relationship is also characteristic of random Brownian motion of molecules which thus can serve as a model for locomotion in the Placozoa Small animals are also capable of swimming actively with the aid of their cilia As soon as they come into contact with a possible substrate a dorsoventral response occurs the dorsal cilia continue to beat whereas the cilia of ventral cells stop their rhythmic beating At the same time the ventral surface tries to make contact with the substrate small protrusions and invaginations the microvilli found on the surface of the columnar cells help in attaching to the substrate via their adhesive action Using T adhaerens as a model were described 0 02 0 002 Hz oscillations in locomotory and feeding patterns as evidence of complex multicellular integration and showed their dependence on the endogenous secretion of signal molecules Evolutionary conserved low molecular weight transmitters glutamate aspartate glycine GABA and ATP acted as coordinators of distinct locomotory and feeding patterns Specifically L glutamate induced and partially mimicked endogenous feeding cycles whereas glycine and GABA suppressed feeding ATP modified feeding is complex first causing feeding like cycles and then suppressing feeding Trichoplax locomotion was modulated by glycine GABA and surprisingly by animals own mucus trails Mucus triples locomotory speed compared to clean substrates Glycine and GABA increased the frequency of turns 23 Regeneration editA notable characteristic of the Placozoa is that they can regenerate themselves from extremely small groups of cells Even when large portions of the organism are removed in the laboratory a complete animal develops again from the remainder It is also possible to rub Trichoplax adhaerens through a strainer in such a manner that individual cells are not destroyed but are separated from one another to a large extent In the test tube they then find their way back together again to form complete organisms If this procedure is performed on several previously strained individuals simultaneously the same thing occurs In this case however cells that previously belonged to a particular individual can suddenly show up as part of another Reproduction editThe Placozoa normally propagate asexually dividing down the middle to produce two or sometimes three roughly equal sized daughters These remain loosely connected clarification needed for a while after fission More rarely budding processes are observed spherules of cells separate from the dorsal surface each of these combines all known cell types and subsequently grows into an individual on its own citation needed Sexual reproduction is thought to be triggered by excessive population density As a result the animals absorb liquid begin to swell and separate from the substrate so that they float freely in the water In the protected interior space the ventral cells form an ovum surrounded by a special envelope the fertilisation membrane the ovum is supplied with nutrients by the surrounding syncytium allowing energy rich yolk to accumulate in its interior Once maturation of the ovum is complete the rest of the animal degenerates liberating the ovum itself Small unciliated cells that form at the same time are interpreted to be spermatozoa It has not yet been possible to observe fertilisation itself the existence of the fertilisation membrane is currently taken to be evidence however that it has taken place citation needed Putative eggs have been observed but they degrade typically at the 32 64 cell stage Neither embryonic development nor sperm have been observed Despite lack of observation of sexual reproduction in the lab the genetic structure of the populations in the wild is compatible with the sexual reproduction mode at least for species of the analysed genotype H5 24 Usually even before its liberation the ovum initiates cleavage processes in which it becomes completely pinched through at the middle A ball of cells characteristic of animals the blastula is ultimately produced in this manner with a maximum of 256 cells Development beyond this 256 cell stage has not yet been observed 25 Trichoplax lack a homologue of the Boule protein that appears to be ubiquitous and conserved in males of all species of other animals tested 26 If its absence implies the species has no males then perhaps its sexual reproduction may be a case of the above described process of regeneration combining cells from two separate organisms into one citation needed original research Due to the possibility of its cloning itself by asexual propagation without limit the life span of Placozoa is infinite in the laboratory several lines descended from a single organism have been maintained in culture for an average of 20 years without the occurrence of sexual processes citation needed Role as a model organism editLong ignored as an exotic marginal phenomenon Trichoplax adhaerens is today viewed as a potential biological model organism citation needed In particular research is needed to determine how a group of cells that cannot be considered full fledged epithelial tissue organizes itself how locomotion and coordination occur in the absence of true muscle and nerve tissue and how the absence of a concrete body axis affects the animal s biology At the genetic level the way in which Trichoplax adhaerens protects against damage to its genome needs to be studied particularly with regard to the existence of special DNA repair processes T adhaerens can tolerate high levels of radiation damage that are lethal to other animals 27 Tolerance to X ray exposure was found to depend on expression of genes involved in DNA repair and apoptosis including the gene Mdm2 27 Complete decoding of the genome should also clarify the placozoans place in evolution which continues to be controversial Its ability to fight cancer through a combination of aggressive DNA repair and ejection of damaged cells makes it a promising organism for cancer research 28 In addition to basic research this animal could also be suitable for studying wound healing and regeneration processes as yet unidentified metabolic products should be researched Finally Trichoplax adhaerens is also being considered as an animal model for testing compounds and antibacterial drugs 29 Systematics editFrancesco Saverio Monticelli described another species in 1893 which he found in the waters around Naples naming it Treptoplax reptans However it has not been observed since 1896 and most zoologists today doubt its existence citation needed Significant genetic differences have been observed between collected specimens matching the morphological description of T adhaerens suggesting that it may be a cryptic species complex At least eight distinct genotypes marked from H1 to H8 have been observed 30 Because great genetic differences often occur between representatives of Trichoplax adhaerens differences that in other taxa would result in their being spread among different genera it is currently unclear whether the single species based on morphological criteria does not actually correspond to a group of cryptospecies i e species that are not outwardly distinguishable from one another Distribution of the genetic variants is not a function of geography some variants are found in multiple regions e g Pacific Caribbean and Red Sea At the same time very different genetic variants can be isolated from the same habitat citation needed References edit M Eitel 2011 Schierwater B Eitel M DeSalle R eds Trichoplax Schulze 1883 World Placozoa Database World Register of Marine Species Retrieved November 25 2011 Laumer Christopher E Gruber Vodicka Harald Hadfield Michael G Pearse Vicki B Riesgo Ana Marioni John C Giribet Gonzalo 2018 Support for a clade of Placozoa and Cnidaria in genes with minimal compositional bias eLife 7 doi 10 7554 eLife 36278 PMC 6277202 PMID 30373720 Studying Placozoa WBR in the Simplest Metazoan Animal Trichoplax adhaerens Introduction to Placozoa Retrieved 2015 10 04 Rudiger Wehner amp Walter Gehring June 2007 Zoologie in German 24th ed Stuttgart Thieme p 696 T Syed amp B Schierwater 2002 Trichoplax adhaerens discovered as a missing link forgotten as a hydrozoan re discovered as a key to metazoan evolution PDF Vie et Milieu 52 4 177 187 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 07 31 The Search for the World s Simplest Animal The Atlantic Growth produces coordination trade offs in Trichoplax adhaerens an animal lacking a central nervous system Smith Carolyn L Varoqueaux Frederique Kittelmann Maike Azzam Rita N Cooper Benjamin Winters Christine A Eitel Michael Fasshauer Dirk Reese Thomas S 2014 Novel Cell Types Neurosecretory Cells and Body Plan of the Early Diverging Metazoan Trichoplax adhaerens Current Biology 24 14 1565 1572 doi 10 1016 j cub 2014 05 046 ISSN 0960 9822 PMC 4128346 PMID 24954051 Before Brains Mechanics May Have Ruled Animal Behavior Quanta Magazine Did Neurons Evolve Twice Before nerves there were peptides Cosmos Magazine Amino acids integrate behaviors in nerveless placozoans PMC a b Mansi Srivastava Emina Begovic Jarrod Chapman Nicholas H Putnam Uffe Hellsten Takeshi Kawashima Alan Kuo Therese Mitros Asaf Salamov Meredith L Carpenter Ana Y Signorovitch Maria A Moreno Kai Kamm Jane Grimwood Jeremy Schmutz Harris Shapiro Igor V Grigoriev Leo W Buss Bernd Schierwater Stephen L Dellaporta amp Daniel S Rokhsar 21 August 2008 The Trichoplax genome and the nature of placozoans PDF Nature 454 7207 955 960 Bibcode 2008Natur 454 955S doi 10 1038 nature07191 PMID 18719581 S2CID 4415492 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Primitive Pancake Astrobiology Magazine Based on a DOE Joint Genome Institute news release Aug 30 2008 Archived from the original on 2011 05 27 Dellaporta Xu A Sagasser S Jakob W Moreno MA Buss LW Schierwater B et al 2006 Mitochondrial genome of Trichoplax adhaerens supports Placozoa as the basal lower metazoan phylum Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 23 8751 6 Bibcode 2006PNAS 103 8751D doi 10 1073 pnas 0602076103 PMC 1470968 PMID 16731622 Maruyama YK 2004 Occurrence in the field of a long term year round stable population of placozoans The Biological Bulletin 206 1 55 60 doi 10 2307 1543198 JSTOR 1543198 PMID 14977730 S2CID 7148007 Pearse Vicki Buchsbaum Oliver Voigt 2007 Field biology of placozoans Trichoplax distribution diversity biotic interactions Integrative and Comparative Biology 47 5 677 692 doi 10 1093 icb icm015 PMID 21669749 Retrieved 2009 03 15 Social feeding behavior of Trichoplax adhaerens PMC NCBI Driscoll T Gillespie JJ Nordberg EK Azad AF Sobral BW 2013 Bacterial DNA sifted from the Trichoplax adhaerens Animalia Placozoa genome project reveals a putative rickettsial endosymbiont Genome Biol Evol Innate immunity in the simplest animals placozoans PMC Smith Carolyn L Pivovarova Natalia Reese Thomas S 2015 Coordinated Feeding Behavior in Trichoplax an Animal without Synapses PLOS ONE 10 9 e0136098 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1036098S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0136098 PMC 4558020 PMID 26333190 Nikitin Mikhail Romanova Daria Borman Simkha Moroz Leonid 2023 Amino acids integrate behaviors in nerveless placozoans Frontiers in Neuroscience 17 1125624 doi 10 3389 fnins 2023 1125624 PMC 10133484 PMID 37123368 Signorovitch AY Dellaporta SL Buss LW 2005 Molecular signatures for sex in the Placozoa Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 43 15518 22 Bibcode 2005PNAS 10215518S doi 10 1073 pnas 0504031102 PMC 1266089 PMID 16230622 Mansi Srivastava Emina Begovic Jarrod Chapman 2008 The Trichoplax genome and the nature of placozoans PDF Nature 454 7207 955 960 Bibcode 2008Natur 454 955S doi 10 1038 nature07191 PMID 18719581 S2CID 4415492 Shah C Vangompel MJ Naeem V Chen Y Lee T Angeloni N Wang Y Xu EY 2010 Swalla Billie J ed Widespread Presence of Human BOULE Homologs among Animals and Conservation of Their Ancient Reproductive Function PLOS Genetics 6 7 e1001022 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1001022 PMC 2904765 PMID 20657660 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Fortunato A Fleming A Aktipis A Maley CC Upregulation of DNA repair genes and cell extrusion underpin the remarkable radiation resistance of Trichoplax adhaerens PLoS Biol 2021 Nov 17 19 11 e3001471 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 3001471 PMID 34788294 PMCID PMC8635375 Microorganism sheds new light on cancer resistance Simunica Juraj Petrovb Drazen Boucebac Tahar Kamechde Nedia Benincasaf Monica Juretic Davor May 2014 Trichoplaxin A new membrane active antimicrobial peptide from placozoan cDNA Biochimica et Biophysica Acta BBA Biomembranes 1838 5 1430 1438 doi 10 1016 j bbamem 2014 02 003 PMID 24530880 Voigt O Collins AG Pearse VB Pearse JS Hadrys H Ender A 2004 Placozoa no longer a phylum of one Current Biology 14 22 R944 5 doi 10 1016 j cub 2004 10 036 PMID 15556848 S2CID 11539852 Further reading editEdward E Ruppert R S Fox R D Barnes Invertebrate Zoology a functional evolutionary approach ch 5 Brooks Cole London 2004 7th ed p 94 ISBN 0 03 025982 7 Richard C Brusca G J Brusca Invertebrates ch 7 Sinauer Associates Sunderland Mass 2002 2nd ed p 210 ISBN 0 87893 097 3 Scientific literature edit Schierwater B Eitel M Jakob W Osigus J Hadrys H Dellaporta L Kolokotronis O Desalle R January 2009 Penny David ed Concatenated Analysis Sheds Light on Early Metazoan Evolution and Fuels a Modern Urmetazoon Hypothesis PLOS Biology 7 1 e20 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1000020 ISSN 1544 9173 PMC 2631068 PMID 19175291 V J Birstein On the Karyotype of Trichoplax sp Placozoa in Biologisches Zentralblatt Fischer Jena Stuttgart 108 1989 p 63 ISSN 0006 3304 K G Grell A Ruthmann Placozoa in F W Harrison J A Westfall eds Microscopic Anatomy of Invertebrates Vol 2 Wiley Liss New York 1991 p 13 ISBN 0 471 56224 6 W Jakob S Sagasser S Dellaporta P Holland K Kuhn B Schierwater The Trox 2 Hox Para Hox gene of Trichoplax Placozoa marks an epithelial boundary in Development Genes and Evolution Springer Berlin 214 2004 p 170 ISSN 0949 944X Y K Maruyama Occurrence in the Field of a Long Term Year Round Stable Population of Placozoa in The Biological Bulletin Laboratory Woods Hole Mass 206 1 2004 p 55 T Syed B Schierwater The evolution of the Placozoa A new morphological model in Senckenbergiana Lethaea Schweizerbart Stuttgart 82 1 2002 p 315 ISSN 0037 2110 P Schubert Trichoplax adhaerens Phylum Placozoa has cells that react with antibodies against the neuropeptide RFAmide in Acta Zoologica Blackwell Science Oxford 74 2 1993 p 115 ISSN 0001 7272 T Ueda S Koga Y K Marayama Dynamic patterns in the locomotion and feeding behaviour by the placozoan Trichoplax adhaerens in BioSystems North Holland Publ Amsterdam 54 1999 p 65 ISSN 0303 2647 First descriptions edit Placozoa K G Grell Trichoplax adhaerens F E Schulze und die Entstehung der Metazoen Trichoplax adhaerens F E Schulze and the evolution of the metazoans in Naturwissenschaftliche Rundschau Wiss Verl Ges Stuttgart 24 1971 p 160 ISSN 0028 1050 Treptoplax reptans F S Monticelli Treptoplax reptans n g n s in Rendiconti Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei Roma Classe di Scienze Fisiche Matematiche e Naturali Rome 2 5 1893 p 39 ISSN 0001 4435 Trichoplax adhaerens F E Schulze Trichoplax adhaerens n g n s in Zoologischer Anzeiger Elsevier Amsterdam Jena 6 1883 p 92 ISSN 0044 5231External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trichoplax nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Trichoplax Tree of life Observation report with image Brief description with image UPI Scientists study genome of the Trichoplax summary of a report in Nature JGI DOE Genome of Simplest Animal Reveals Ancient Lineage Confounding Array of Complex Capabilities Video of Trichoplax in motion Portals nbsp Animals nbsp Marine life Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trichoplax amp oldid 1210846718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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