Published May 18, 2017
| Version v1
Publication
Biological strategy for the fabrication of highly ordered aragonite helices: the microstructure of the cavolinioidean gastropods
Description
The Cavolinioidea are planktonic gastropods which construct their shells with the so-called aragonitic
helical fibrous microstructure, consisting of a highly ordered arrangement of helically coiled interlocking
continuous crystalline aragonite fibres. Our study reveals that, despite the high and continuous degree
of interlocking between fibres, every fibre has a differentiated organic-rich thin external band, which
is never invaded by neighbouring fibres. In this way, fibres avoid extinction. These intra-fibre organicrich
bands appear on the growth surface of the shell as minuscule elevations, which have to be secreted
differentially by the outer mantle cells. We propose that, as the shell thickens during mineralization,
fibre secretion proceeds by a mechanism of contact recognition and displacement of the tips along
circular trajectories by the cells of the outer mantle surface. Given the sizes of the tips, this mechanism
has to operate at the subcellular level. Accordingly, the fabrication of the helical microstructure is under
strict biological control. This mechanism of fibre-by-fibre fabrication by the mantle cells is unlike that
any other shell microstructure
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle/11441/60017
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/60017
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE