The siliceous sponge
Monorhaphis chuni (Hexactinellida) synthesizes the largest biosilica structures on earth (3 m). Scanning electron microscopy has shown that
these spicules are regularly composed of concentrically arranged lamellae (width: 3–10 μm). Between 400 and 600 lamellae have
been counted in one giant basal spicule. An axial canal (diameter: ~2 μm) is located in the center of the spicules; it harbors
the axial filament and is surrounded by an axial cylinder (100–150 μm) of electron-dense homogeneous silica. During dissolution
of the spicules with hydrofluoric acid, the axial filament is first released followed by the release of a proteinaceous tubule.
Two major proteins (150 kDa and 35 kDa) have been visualized, together with a 24-kDa protein that cross-reacts with antibodies
against silicatein. The spicules are surrounded by a collagen net, and the existence of a hexactinellidan collagen gene has
been demonstrated by cloning it from
Aphrocallistes vastus. During the axial growth of the spicules, silicatein or the silicatein-related protein is proposed to become associated with
the surface of the spicules and to be finally internalized through the apical opening to associate with the axial filament.
Based on the data gathered here, we suggest that, in the Hexactinellida, the growth of the spicules is mediated by silicatein
or by a silicatein-related protein, with the orientation of biosilica deposition being controlled by lectin and collagen.
Keywords Spicules - Silica formation - Silicatein-related protein - Hexactinellida -
Monorhaphis chuni (Porifera)
Carsten Eckert was previously with the Museum für Naturkunde, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
The collagen sequence from Aphrocallistes vastus reported here, viz., [COL_APHRO] APHVACOL (accession number AM411124), has been deposited in the EMBL/GenBank data base.
This work was supported by grants from the European Commission, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the Bundesministerium
für Bildung und Forschung Germany (project: Center of Excellence BIOTECmarin), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 50402023), and the International Human Frontier Science
Program.