Scientists from the Ben Gurion University (BGU) in Beer Sheba have found what they describe as a new, intriguing facet of guanine crystals by studying juvenile scallops’ eyes undergoing development. The scallops can direct the growth to form ultra-thin crystals by using pre-assembled macromolecular sheets. The crystals have practical applications, so maybe this is why shellfish are not kosher.
BGU explained highly reflective crystals of the nucleotide base guanine are widely distributed in animal coloration and visual systems. Organisms precisely control the morphology and organization of the crystals to optimize different optical effects
Will you offer us a hand? Every gift, regardless of size, fuels our future.
Your critical contribution enables us to maintain our independence from shareholders or wealthy owners, allowing us to keep up reporting without bias. It means we can continue to make Jewish Business News available to everyone.
You can support us for as little as $1 via PayPal at [email protected].
Thank you.
A scallop has more than 100 eyes. But each eye, says BGU, is also a masterpiece of biological crystallization: thousands of thin square guanine crystals are tiled into a concave mirror that reflects light onto the overlying retina, enabling the scallop to see.
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev’s Dr. Benjamin Palmer and PhD student Avital Wagner took a deep dive into scallops’ eyes using the latest in cryo-SEM microscopy to try and understand some of the mysteries about these crystals. In particular, they wanted to understand how scallops make plate-like guanine crystals, which express high reflective crystal faces, which are difficult to obtain in the lab.
“This natural production far exceeds what chemists are capable of reproducing synthetically at the moment,” explains Dr. Palmer, “but they provide intriguing strategies for controlling the properties of synthetic crystalline materials which may be used for future pigments that do not rely on harmful chemicals, but on natural processes instead.”
Palmer and Wagner were able to follow the crystal formation process using a new cryo-SEM microscope recently donated to Ben-Gurion University by Nahum Guzik. The latest in technological microscopy enabled them to see the square-shaped guanine crystals, something which was impossible 50 years ago when research on the scallop’s eyes began.
Another curious finding was that the process of making these crystals is strikingly similar to the formation of melanin (which is found in freckles).
Their research was published earlier this month in Nature Communications. Their study is the first to link ultrastructure features of bio crystallization and melanin production by showing that the two processes develop quite similarly. “It is now probable that one common stem cell governs these two processes in wildly divergent animals,” says Dr. Palmer of the Department of Chemistry.