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Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia

A detailed investigation of the shell formation of the palaeoheterodont ‘living fossil’ Neotrigonia concentrated on the timing and manufacture of the calcified ‘bosses’ which stud the outside of all trigonioid bivalves (extant and fossil) has been conducted. Electron microscopy and optical microscop...

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Autores principales: Checa, Antonio G., Salas, Carmen, Harper, Elizabeth M., Bueno-Pérez, Juan de Dios
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3934977/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24587202
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090033
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author Checa, Antonio G.
Salas, Carmen
Harper, Elizabeth M.
Bueno-Pérez, Juan de Dios
author_facet Checa, Antonio G.
Salas, Carmen
Harper, Elizabeth M.
Bueno-Pérez, Juan de Dios
author_sort Checa, Antonio G.
collection PubMed
description A detailed investigation of the shell formation of the palaeoheterodont ‘living fossil’ Neotrigonia concentrated on the timing and manufacture of the calcified ‘bosses’ which stud the outside of all trigonioid bivalves (extant and fossil) has been conducted. Electron microscopy and optical microscopy revealed that Neotrigonia spp. have a spiral-shaped periostracal groove. The periostracum itself is secreted by the basal cell, as a thin dark pellicle, becoming progressively transformed into a thin dark layer by additions of secretions from the internal outer mantle fold. Later, intense secretion of the internal surface of the outer mantle fold forms a translucent layer, which becomes transformed by tanning into a dark layer. The initiation of calcified bosses occurred at a very early stage of periostracum formation, deep within the periostracal groove immediately below the initialmost dark layer. At this stage, they consist of a series of polycyclically twinned crystals. The bosses grow as the periostracum traverse through the periostracal groove, in coordination with the thickening of the dark periostracal layer and until, upon reaching the mantle edge, they impinge upon each other and become transformed into large prisms separated by dark periostracal walls. In conclusion, the initial bosses and the external part of the prismatic layer are fully intraperiostracal. With later growth, the prisms transform into fibrous aggregates, although the details of the process are unknown. This reinforces the relationships with other groups that have the ability to form intraperiostracal calcifications, for example the unionoids with which the trigonioids form the clade Paleoheterodonta. The presence of similar structures in anomalodesmatans and other euheterodonts raises the question of whether this indicates a relationship or represents a convergence. The identification of very early calcification within an organic sheet has interesting implications for our understanding of how shells may have evolved.
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spelling pubmed-39349772014-03-04 Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia Checa, Antonio G. Salas, Carmen Harper, Elizabeth M. Bueno-Pérez, Juan de Dios PLoS One Research Article A detailed investigation of the shell formation of the palaeoheterodont ‘living fossil’ Neotrigonia concentrated on the timing and manufacture of the calcified ‘bosses’ which stud the outside of all trigonioid bivalves (extant and fossil) has been conducted. Electron microscopy and optical microscopy revealed that Neotrigonia spp. have a spiral-shaped periostracal groove. The periostracum itself is secreted by the basal cell, as a thin dark pellicle, becoming progressively transformed into a thin dark layer by additions of secretions from the internal outer mantle fold. Later, intense secretion of the internal surface of the outer mantle fold forms a translucent layer, which becomes transformed by tanning into a dark layer. The initiation of calcified bosses occurred at a very early stage of periostracum formation, deep within the periostracal groove immediately below the initialmost dark layer. At this stage, they consist of a series of polycyclically twinned crystals. The bosses grow as the periostracum traverse through the periostracal groove, in coordination with the thickening of the dark periostracal layer and until, upon reaching the mantle edge, they impinge upon each other and become transformed into large prisms separated by dark periostracal walls. In conclusion, the initial bosses and the external part of the prismatic layer are fully intraperiostracal. With later growth, the prisms transform into fibrous aggregates, although the details of the process are unknown. This reinforces the relationships with other groups that have the ability to form intraperiostracal calcifications, for example the unionoids with which the trigonioids form the clade Paleoheterodonta. The presence of similar structures in anomalodesmatans and other euheterodonts raises the question of whether this indicates a relationship or represents a convergence. The identification of very early calcification within an organic sheet has interesting implications for our understanding of how shells may have evolved. Public Library of Science 2014-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3934977/ /pubmed/24587202 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090033 Text en © 2014 Checa et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Checa, Antonio G.
Salas, Carmen
Harper, Elizabeth M.
Bueno-Pérez, Juan de Dios
Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia
title Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia
title_full Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia
title_fullStr Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia
title_full_unstemmed Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia
title_short Early Stage Biomineralization in the Periostracum of the ‘Living Fossil’ Bivalve Neotrigonia
title_sort early stage biomineralization in the periostracum of the ‘living fossil’ bivalve neotrigonia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3934977/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24587202
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090033
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