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Calcite Formation in Soft Coral Sclerites Is Determined by a Single Reactive Extracellular Protein
Authors:M. Azizur Rahman  Tamotsu Oomori  Gert W?rheide
Affiliation:From the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Palaeontology and Geobiology and ;the GeoBio-Center, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, 80333 Munich, Germany.;the §Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of the Ryukyus, 1 Senbaru, Nishihara-cho, Okinawa 903-0213, Japan, and ;the Bavarian State Collections of Palaeontology and Geology, 80333 Munich, Germany
Abstract:Calcium carbonate exists in two main forms, calcite and aragonite, in the skeletons of marine organisms. The primary mineralogy of marine carbonates has changed over the history of the earth depending on the magnesium/calcium ratio in seawater during the periods of the so-called “calcite and aragonite seas.” Organisms that prefer certain mineralogy appear to flourish when their preferred mineralogy is favored by seawater chemistry. However, this rule is not without exceptions. For example, some octocorals produce calcite despite living in an aragonite sea. Here, we address the unresolved question of how organisms such as soft corals are able to form calcitic skeletal elements in an aragonite sea. We show that an extracellular protein called ECMP-67 isolated from soft coral sclerites induces calcite formation in vitro even when the composition of the calcifying solution favors aragonite precipitation. Structural details of both the surface and the interior of single crystals generated upon interaction with ECMP-67 were analyzed with an apertureless-type near-field IR microscope with high spatial resolution. The results show that this protein is the main determining factor for driving the production of calcite instead of aragonite in the biocalcification process and that –OH, secondary structures (e.g. α-helices and amides), and other necessary chemical groups are distributed over the center of the calcite crystals. Using an atomic force microscope, we also explored how this extracellular protein significantly affects the molecular-scale kinetics of crystal formation. We anticipate that a more thorough investigation of the proteinaceous skeleton content of different calcite-producing marine organisms will reveal similar components that determine the mineralogy of the organisms. These findings have significant implications for future models of the crystal structure of calcite in nature.
Keywords:Calcification   Calcium-binding Proteins   Chemical Biology   Protein Synthesis   Spectroscopy   Biomineralization   Calcite   Calcium Carbonate   Sclerites   Soft Corals
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