Morphology of the Adhesive System in the Sandcastle Worm, Phragmatopoma californica

Ching Shuen Wang, Kelli K. Svendsen, Russell J. Stewart

研究成果: 書貢獻/報告類型章節

摘要

The marine Sandcastle worm (P. californica) and related species live in composite mineralized tubes for shelter. They gather the mineral phase for free from the environment as sand grains and seashell bits with a crown of ciliated tentacles. The captured mineral particles are conveyed for inspection to the building organ — a pincer-shaped pair of dexterous palps in front of the mouth (Fig. 10.1). A dab of proteinaceous adhesive (Jensen and Morse, 1988) is secreted from the building organ onto suitable particles as they are pressed onto the end of the tube. The major protein components of the adhesive are a group of heterogeneous proteins, referred to as Pc3x, characterized by serial runs of 10–14 serine residues punctuated with single tyrosine residues (Zhao et al., 2005). Phosphorylation of more than 90% of the serines (Stewart et al., 2004) makes the Pc3 proteins polyacidic (pI
原文英語
主出版物標題Biological Adhesive Systems: From Nature to Technical and Medical Application
編輯Janek von Byern, Ingo Grunwald
出版地Vienna
發行者Springer Vienna
頁面169-179
頁數11
ISBN(列印)978-3-7091-0286-2
DOIs
出版狀態已發佈 - 2010
對外發佈

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