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  4. Ultrascale and Microscale Growth Dynamics of the Cidaroid Spine of Phyllacanthus imperialis Revealed by Mg-26 Labeling and NanoSIMS Isotopic Imaging
 
research article

Ultrascale and Microscale Growth Dynamics of the Cidaroid Spine of Phyllacanthus imperialis Revealed by Mg-26 Labeling and NanoSIMS Isotopic Imaging

Gorzelak, Przemyslaw
•
Stolarski, Jaroslaw
•
Dery, Aurelie
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2014
Journal Of Morphology

Growth dynamics of the primary spine of the cidaroid sea urchin Phyllacanthus imperialis was assessed for the first time using pulsed Mg-26-labeling and NanoSIMS isotopic imaging. The sea urchin was incubated twice (for 48 h) in artificial seawater with elevated level of Mg-26. After each labeling event, the sea urchin was returned for 72 h to seawater with natural isotopic abundance of Mg-26. NanoSIMS ion microprobe was subsequently used to visualize the labeled regions of the spine with submicrometer lateral resolution. The growth of the new skeleton was restricted to the distal-most and peripheral portions of the spine. Skeletogenesis involved mostly the deposition of continuous thickening layers and lateral growth involving bridges between previously formed trabeculae. The timescale of formation of individual thickening layers (ca. 1 mu m in width) on the stereom trabeculae was on the order of 1 day. Longitudinal growth occurred mainly at the periphery in the form of small portions of the thickening deposits or more massive microspines that appeared to branch and fuse with those above and below. These microspines were found to grow at about 10 mu m/day. These results reveal that the skeletal growth of a juvenile cidaroid spine is complex and highly heterogeneous, with different extension rates depending on the stage of the stereom development and/or direction of the growth fronts. The growth pattern observed here at the submicrometer scale provides direct evidence supporting the earlier suggestions that the lamellar structure of echinoderm stereom is formed by periodic deposition of continuous mineral layers. (C) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/jmor.20260
Web of Science ID

WOS:000337666700007

Author(s)
Gorzelak, Przemyslaw
Stolarski, Jaroslaw
Dery, Aurelie
Dubois, Philippe
Escrig, Stephane  
Meibom, Anders  
Date Issued

2014

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Published in
Journal Of Morphology
Volume

275

Issue

7

Start page

788

End page

796

Subjects

echinoderms

•

biomineralization

•

skeleton

•

stereom

•

stable isotope labeling

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LGB  
Available on Infoscience
August 29, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/106386
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