A Nature's Curiosity: The Argonaut ``Shell'' and Its Organic Content

Affiliation auteurs!!!! Error affiliation !!!!
TitreA Nature's Curiosity: The Argonaut ``Shell'' and Its Organic Content
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuteursOudot M, Ben Shir I, Schmidt A, Plasseraud L, Broussard C, Neige P, Marin F
JournalCRYSTALS
Volume10
Pagination839
Date PublishedSEP
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN2073-4352
Mots-clésArgonauta, biomineral, egg-case, Microstructure, Proteomic, Shell, SS-NMR
Résumé

Molluscs are known for their ability to produce a calcified shell resulting from a genetically controlled and matrix-mediated process, performed extracellularly. The occluded organic matrix consists of a complex mixture of proteins, glycoproteins and polysaccharides that are in most cases secreted by the mantle epithelium. To our knowledge, the model studied here-the argonaut, also called paper nautilus-represents the single mollusc example where this general scheme is not valid: the shell of this cephalopod is indeed formed by its first dorsal arms pair and it functions as an eggcase, secreted by females only; furthermore, this coiled structure is fully calcitic and the organization of its layered microstructures is unique. Thus, the argonautid shell appears as an apomorphy of this restricted family, not homologous to other cephalopod shells. In the present study, we investigated the physical and biochemical properties of the shell ofArgonauta hians, the winged argonaut. We show that the shell matrix contains unusual proportions of soluble and insoluble components, and that it is mostly proteinaceous, with a low proportion of sugars that appear to be mostly sulfated glycosaminoglycans. Proteomics performed on different shell fractions generated several peptide sequences and identified a number of protein hits, not shared with other molluscan shell matrices. This may suggest the recruitment of unique molecular tools for mineralizing the argonaut's shell, a finding that has some implications on the evolution of cephalopod shell matrices.

DOI10.3390/cryst10090839