The Microstructure, Proteomics and Crystallization of the Limpet Teeth

2018 
: Limpets are marine mollusks that use mineralized teeth, one of the hardest and strongest biomaterials, to feed on algae on intertidal rocks. However, most of studies only focus on the ultrastructure and chemical composition of the teeth while the molecular information is largely unknown, limiting our understanding of this unique and fundamental biomineralization process. The study investigates the microstructure, proteomics, and crystallization in the teeth of limpet Cellana toreuma. It is found that the limpets formed alternatively tricuspid teeth and unicuspid teeth. Small nanoneedles are densely packed at the tips or leading regions of the cusps. In contrast, big nanoneedles resembling chemically synthesized goethite are loosely packed in the trailing regions of the cusps. Proteins extracted from the whole radula, such as ferritin, peroxiredoxin, arginine kinase, GTPase-Rabs, and clathrin, are identified by proteomics. A goethite-binding experiment coupled with proteomics and RNA-seq highlights six chitin-binding proteins (CtCBPs). Furthermore, the extracted proteins from the cusps of radula or the framework chitin induce packing of crystals and possibly affect crystal polymorphs in vitro. This study provides insight into the unique biomineralization process in the limpet teeth at the molecular levels, which may guide biomimetic strategies aimed at designing hard materials at room temperature.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    57
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []