Abstract

Abstract. After feeding, polyps of colonial hydroids contract regularly, dispersing food throughout the colony via the gastrovascular fluid. Such contractions may trigger signaling pathways that allow colonies to grow in an adaptive manner, i.e., to initiate development of more polyps in food‐rich areas and to suppress polyp development in food‐poor areas. In this context, we investigated the structure and potential signaling of the junction between polyps and stolons in colonies of the hydroid Podocoryna carnea. Using transmission electron microscopy, we found that the density of mitochondrion‐rich epitheliomuscular cells was low in polyp and stolon tissues except at or near the polyp‐stolon junction, where many of these mitochondrion‐rich cells occur in ectodermal tissue. In vivo fluorescence microscopy suggests that these mitochondria are a principal source of the metabolic signals of the colony. Both native fluorescence of NAD(P)H and fluorescence from peroxides (visualized with H2DCFDA) co‐localize to this region of the polyp. Rhodamine 123 fluorescence suggests that both these metabolic signals emanate from mitochondria. To test whether such metabolic signals may be involved in colony pattern formation, inbred lines of P. carnea were used. Colonies of a runner‐like inbred line grow with widely spaced polyps and long stolonal connections, much like wild‐type colonies in a food‐poor environment. Colonies of a sheet‐like inbred line grow with closely spaced polyps and short stolonal connections, similar to wild‐type colonies in a food‐rich environment. Polyp‐stolon junctions in runner‐like and sheet‐like colonies were imaged for the fluorescence of H2DCFDA. Densitometric analysis of this signal indicates that the mitochondria in epitheliomuscular cells of runner‐like polyps emit greater amounts of peroxides. Because peroxides and other reactive oxygen species are frequently intermediaries in metabolic signaling pathways, we suspect that such signaling may indeed occur at polyp‐stolon junctions, affecting colony pattern formation in these inbred lines and possibly in hydroid colonies in general.

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