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  4. First paleoproteome study of fossil fish otoliths and the pristine preservation of the biomineral crystal host
 
research article

First paleoproteome study of fossil fish otoliths and the pristine preservation of the biomineral crystal host

Stolarski, Jaroslaw
•
Drake, Jeana
•
Coronado, Ismael
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March 7, 2023
Scientific Reports

Otoliths are calcium carbonate components of the stato-acoustical organ responsible for hearing and maintenance of the body balance in teleost fish. During their formation, control over, e.g., morphology and carbonate polymorph is influenced by complex insoluble collagen-like protein and soluble non-collagenous protein assemblages; many of these proteins are incorporated into their aragonite crystal structure. However, in the fossil record these proteins are considered lost through diagenetic processes, hampering studies of past biomineralization mechanisms. Here we report the presence of 11 fish-specific proteins (and several isoforms) in Miocene (ca. 14.8-14.6 Ma) phycid hake otoliths. These fossil otoliths were preserved in water-impermeable clays and exhibit microscopic and crystallographic features indistinguishable from modern representatives, consistent with an exceptionally pristine state of preservation. Indeed, these fossil otoliths retain ca. 10% of the proteins sequenced from modern counterparts, including proteins specific to inner ear development, such as otolin-1-like proteins involved in the arrangement of the otoliths into the sensory epithelium and otogelin/otogelin-like proteins that are located in the acellular membranes of the inner ear in modern fish. The specificity of these proteins excludes the possibility of external contamination. Identification of a fraction of identical proteins in modern and fossil phycid hake otoliths implies a highly conserved inner ear biomineralization process through time.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41598-023-30537-8
Web of Science ID

WOS:001003605100034

Author(s)
Stolarski, Jaroslaw
Drake, Jeana
Coronado, Ismael
Vieira, Ana R.
Radwanska, Urszula
Heath-Heckman, Elizabeth A. C.
Mazur, Maciej
Guo, Jinming  
Meibom, Anders  
Date Issued

2023-03-07

Publisher

Nature Portfolio

Published in
Scientific Reports
Volume

13

Issue

1

Article Number

3822

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

genome annotation

•

phycis-phycis

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starmaker

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protein

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growth

•

identification

•

biomolecules

•

forkbeard

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collagen

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tool

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LGB  
Available on Infoscience
July 31, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/199570
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