Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5914659 | Journal of Structural Biology | 2011 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
This study reports on the role of silicon in the early biocalcification steps, where silicon and calcium were detected on the surface of cyanobacteria (initial stage of lacustrine calcite precipitation) and in crustacean cuticles. By using innovative methodological approaches of correlative microscopy (AFM in combination with analytical TEM: EFTEM, EELS) the chemical form of silicon in biocalcifying matrices and organic-inorganic particles is determined. Previously, silicon was reported to be localized in active growth areas in the young bone of vertebrates. We have found evidence that biocalcification in evolutionarily distant organisms involves very similar initial phases with silicon as a key element at the organic-inorganic interface.
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Authors
Nadejda B. Matsko, Nada ŽnidarÅ¡iÄ, Ilse Letofsky-Papst, Maria Dittrich, Werner Grogger, Jasna Å trus, Ferdinand Hofer,