Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola

We have recently studied the role of cell death in the immune system of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola. Typical biochemical and morphological changes of apoptosis were induced in celomocytes of these marine worms after in vitro exposure of cells to hydrogen peroxide. Apoptosis was time and d...

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Main Author: GA Blanco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Modena and Reggio Emilia 2010-10-01
Series:Invertebrate Survival Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.isj.unimo.it/articoli/ISJ220.pdf
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spelling doaj-c12e6d3f29524082b8b202195c92a6222020-11-25T03:46:41ZengUniversity of Modena and Reggio EmiliaInvertebrate Survival Journal1824-307X2010-10-0172239250Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricolaGA BlancoWe have recently studied the role of cell death in the immune system of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola. Typical biochemical and morphological changes of apoptosis were induced in celomocytes of these marine worms after in vitro exposure of cells to hydrogen peroxide. Apoptosis was time and dose dependent, and required several hours to become apparent. Surprisingly, in unexposed samples a subtype of granulocyte was observed to undergo homotypic aggregation, extensive cytoskeletal changes, and degranulation followed by cell death. This spontaneous response ending in cell death occurred in a divalent cation-dependent manner, served to entrap foreign particles, and was blocked by EDTA-containing saline solutions. Even though the mode of granulocyte cell death shares some features with apoptosis, it appears to be a different form of programmed cell death since it occurs within minutes and does not produce single cell-derived apoptotic bodies but transforms itself into one or several syncytial masses with haemostatic and immune purposes. Since numerous granulocyte types and multicellular masses involved in cellular immunity have been described in sipunculan worms, the review also discusses the potential influence of activation of granulocytes by sea water in expanding the variety of morphological types and multicellular structures identified through morphological studies among sipunculan species.http://www.isj.unimo.it/articoli/ISJ220.pdfSipunculaimmune responseshemostasiscell deathcelomocytesapoptosiscoagulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author GA Blanco
spellingShingle GA Blanco
Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola
Invertebrate Survival Journal
Sipuncula
immune responses
hemostasis
cell death
celomocytes
apoptosis
coagulation
author_facet GA Blanco
author_sort GA Blanco
title Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola
title_short Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola
title_full Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola
title_fullStr Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola
title_full_unstemmed Cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola
title_sort cell death and the immune responses of the sipunculan worm themiste petricola
publisher University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
series Invertebrate Survival Journal
issn 1824-307X
publishDate 2010-10-01
description We have recently studied the role of cell death in the immune system of the sipunculan worm Themiste petricola. Typical biochemical and morphological changes of apoptosis were induced in celomocytes of these marine worms after in vitro exposure of cells to hydrogen peroxide. Apoptosis was time and dose dependent, and required several hours to become apparent. Surprisingly, in unexposed samples a subtype of granulocyte was observed to undergo homotypic aggregation, extensive cytoskeletal changes, and degranulation followed by cell death. This spontaneous response ending in cell death occurred in a divalent cation-dependent manner, served to entrap foreign particles, and was blocked by EDTA-containing saline solutions. Even though the mode of granulocyte cell death shares some features with apoptosis, it appears to be a different form of programmed cell death since it occurs within minutes and does not produce single cell-derived apoptotic bodies but transforms itself into one or several syncytial masses with haemostatic and immune purposes. Since numerous granulocyte types and multicellular masses involved in cellular immunity have been described in sipunculan worms, the review also discusses the potential influence of activation of granulocytes by sea water in expanding the variety of morphological types and multicellular structures identified through morphological studies among sipunculan species.
topic Sipuncula
immune responses
hemostasis
cell death
celomocytes
apoptosis
coagulation
url http://www.isj.unimo.it/articoli/ISJ220.pdf
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