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Sponge cells build skeletons with pole - and - beam structure.»
Not exact matches
Researchers reporting in the
Cell Press journal Current Biology on September 17 have found that
sponges build their skeletons in a completely different way than other animals do.
Andrey Lavrov and Igor Kosevich, MSU biologists, researched the ability of the
cells of marine
sponges (Porifera) to reaggregation — a process, during which the artificially separated
sponge cells reaggregate and
build multicellular aggregates of varying types.
One group of
cells had a planar interface between perovskite and ETL, whereas in the other one a mesoporous interface was
built up, intermingling perovskite and metal oxide to form a
sponge like structure that contains a huge number of extremely tiny pores.