Abstract

In previous papers it has been demonstrated that the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) is responsible for the stimulation of water filtration and oxygen consumption elicited by a temperature increase in the Mediterranean demosponge Axinella polypoides. The signal transduction pathway triggered by ABA involves activation of ADP-ribosyl cyclase (ADPRC), leading to an increase of the intracellular concentration of cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR), a universal and potent intracellular calcium mobilizer. These data prompted us to investigate the possible involvement of the ABA/ADPRC/cADPR system in the sponge life cycle and in post-traumatic tissue regeneration of Mediterranean sponges. ADPRC activity was detected in the cell lysate from several common Mediterranean sponge species, including Calcarea and Demospongiae. Specimens were collected monthly over a 2-year period, from January 2002 to April 2004. All species studied showed a peak of ADPRC activity during July and August 2003, concomitant with an anomalous heat wave that struck the whole Mediterranean basin during these months. In the aquarium, during spontaneous tissue regeneration, an increase of the [ABA] i and of the ADPRC activity over time zero values was consistently observed. In conclusion, these results indicate that an increase of ABA content and of ADPRC activity correlates with the growth and with post-traumatic tissue regeneration in several Mediterranean sponge species, indicating that the ABA/ADPRC/cADPR system is involved in the response to environmental stress in sponges. Determination of ADPRC activity/ABA content may provide a means to assess metabolic activation of sponge populations under conditions of environmental stress.

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