What is a Metazoan?
In other words what are the inherent
Characteristics of the animal body plan that are different
from that of a colonial heterotrophic protists?
What are some characteristics of sponges that help us
place them directly in the metazoan
Phylum Placozoa
-- 2-3 mm, 25 um- thick, resembling a large ameba
-- Lacks anterior posterior polarity
-- Asexual reproduction is prevalent
--The most primitive animal?
Trichoplax adhaerens
Phylum Placozoa Dorsal
Fiber synctium
cilium
epithelium-like layer
thick glandular layer
Flagellated cells
-- Feed ventrally by absorption of digested material
-- Lack organs but tissue-like outer walls
-- A bit more than 2000 cells
-- Only 4 different cell types
- (20 in sponges; > 220 in mammals)
-- Smallest genome of all animals
Intercellular
junctions
Three competing Scenarios
A. Earliest view of them as the basal metazoan
B. Special cellular junctions consisting of two opposing
dense plaques (desmosomes) not found in most sponges
C. 16S rRNA data…maybe secondarily simplified from more
complex ancestors?
Epitheliozoa Eumetazoa
Functional Morph.
Mitochondrial genome of
Trichoplax adhaerens
supports Placozoa as the
basal lower metazoan phylum
Dellaporta, Stephen L.
et al. (2006) Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA 103,
8751-8756
Largest known mt genome 46
kbp, 2x that of most metazoa
with introns and other
intrageneic spacers and large
protein coding regions that are
usually lacking in other animals
Blue: known mt proteins
Gray: ribosomal genes
Green: unknown open reading frames
Red lines: introns
More than 9, 000 species, including
jellyfish, corals, anemones, hydroids
and much much more.
Phylum Cnidaria
Themes
General characteristics of Cnidaria
Why are they successful?
Cnidaria Diversity and Taxonomy
Classes, SubClasses of Anthozoans
Similarity of Polyp and Medusa
The Cnidaria Body Plan
Class Scyphozoa, the jellyfish
Complexity, Sensory & Nervous System
What Characteristics Account for
the Great Success of Cnidarians?
1. Two distinct adult forms
2. Diphasic life cycle in some species
3. Ability to proliferate by cloning
4. And to form polymorphic colonies
5. Formidable prey capture device
6. Low Energy Demands
Characteristics of the Class Scyphozoa
(Adaptations to a drifting, carnivorous lifestyle)
About
200
species
• Small a few cm
• Velum to aid in locomotion
• Radial canals unbranched
• Simple epidermal and endodermal nerve net
• Nematocysts usually small without toxins
Hydromedusa for
comparison
Characteristics of the Scyphozoa
mouth
stomach
mesoglea
gastric pouch
gonad
radial canal
gastrodermis
Radial
canal
Characteristics of the Scyphozoa
(Adaptations to a drifting, carnivorous lifestyle)
G-V cavity more
complex, adapted
to subdue and
digest larger and
active prey
MOUTH MANUBRIUM
Stomach
G-V Canals
Stomach
Gastric Pouches
Characteristics of the Scyphozoa
(Adaptations to a drifting, carnivorous lifestyle)
G-V cavity more
complex, adapted
to subdue and
digest larger and
active prey
Characteristics of the Scyphozoa
mouth
stomach
mesoglea
gastric pouch
gonad
radial canal
gastrodermis
Radial
canal
How is swimming pace, direction coordinated?
Coronal
Muscles
and
swimming
How are the
coronal muscles
connected to the
nervous system
that includes:
- Sensory neurons,
motor neurons
- Nerve net
- Inner and outer
nerve rings
- Marginal ganglia
associated with
rhopalia that
constitute a pacemaker
Characteristics
of the Scyphozoa
(Adaptations to a drifting,
carnivorous lifestyle)
The nervous system
is more complex;
unique sensory
structures
(than nerve net
shared by all
Cnidaria)
To ganglia
Garm et al., 2006
Cell Tissue Research #325
Rhopalia are Intergrated with Nerve Rings in Box Jellies
(Cubomedusa)
EN: epidermal nerve
GN: gastrodermal nerve
RC: Ring Canal
EN joins the nerve ring
NCB: nerve cluster
RN: ring nerve
24 eyes but no brain?
Marginal
ganglia
Inner and outer
nerve rings
Coronal muscles
Nerve net
Epiheliomuscular system
Epidermal
nerve
of rhopalia
When did a Centralized Nervous System Evolve?
“Conventional” view
Marlow et al., 2009, Developmental Neurobiology
Mackie, 2004. Neurosignals #13
Nerve rings are Core of CNS in medusae
-- Concentrations of hundreds of axons in parallel form coupled nerve rings.
Having an annular form rather than a large ganglion does not make it
less centralized.
-- The annular configuration is a function of radial symmetry