Pseudo-Biomineralization: Complex Mineral Structures Shaped by Microbes

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Grażyna M. Durak
  • Michael Laumann
  • Stefan L. P. Wolf
  • Atul Pawar
  • Denis Gebauer
  • Thomas Böttcher

External Research Organisations

  • University of Konstanz
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5088-5096
Number of pages9
JournalACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering
Volume5
Issue number10
Early online date6 Sept 2019
Publication statusPublished - 14 Oct 2019
Externally publishedYes

Abstract

Biomineralization is an active, biologically governed process of mineral formation, established early on in the history of life. The appearance of biomineralizing organisms heavily influenced the course of evolution, leading to the development of the large diversity of the extant taxa. Yet, we are still only beginning to grasp the intricate, genetically regulated mechanisms involved. Since prokaryotic organisms were the first to emerge from the primordial environments, we investigated bacteria-mineral interactions using titration and gas diffusion systems adapted to emulate conditions, which may have facilitated the development of biomineralization initially. By screening the minerals and bacteria from titration experiments with scanning electron microscopy, we discovered a broad spectrum of behavioral strategies employed by bacteria confronted with calcification, which fell into three main categories: (1) evasion of mineralization by the formation of the biofilm, (2) random embedding into the mineral, and (3) control over the mineral shape during its formation. The latter phenomenon we termed pseudo-biomineralization. Our experiments indicate that pseudo-biomineralization is an active process obligatorily reliant on the external calcifying conditions and allowing considerable degree of control over mineral shape, thus producing structures reminiscent of true biominerals. Here, we describe this notion for the first time, thus providing vital insight into the genesis of a transitional stage to calcium carbonate-based biomineralization systems.

Keywords

    CaCO mineralization, bacteria, biofilm, biogenic calcite, biomineralization, evolution

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Pseudo-Biomineralization: Complex Mineral Structures Shaped by Microbes. / Durak, Grażyna M.; Laumann, Michael; Wolf, Stefan L. P. et al.
In: ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering, Vol. 5, No. 10, 14.10.2019, p. 5088-5096.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Durak GM, Laumann M, Wolf SLP, Pawar A, Gebauer D, Böttcher T. Pseudo-Biomineralization: Complex Mineral Structures Shaped by Microbes. ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering. 2019 Oct 14;5(10):5088-5096. Epub 2019 Sept 6. doi: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.9b00387
Durak, Grażyna M. ; Laumann, Michael ; Wolf, Stefan L. P. et al. / Pseudo-Biomineralization: Complex Mineral Structures Shaped by Microbes. In: ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering. 2019 ; Vol. 5, No. 10. pp. 5088-5096.
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abstract = "Biomineralization is an active, biologically governed process of mineral formation, established early on in the history of life. The appearance of biomineralizing organisms heavily influenced the course of evolution, leading to the development of the large diversity of the extant taxa. Yet, we are still only beginning to grasp the intricate, genetically regulated mechanisms involved. Since prokaryotic organisms were the first to emerge from the primordial environments, we investigated bacteria-mineral interactions using titration and gas diffusion systems adapted to emulate conditions, which may have facilitated the development of biomineralization initially. By screening the minerals and bacteria from titration experiments with scanning electron microscopy, we discovered a broad spectrum of behavioral strategies employed by bacteria confronted with calcification, which fell into three main categories: (1) evasion of mineralization by the formation of the biofilm, (2) random embedding into the mineral, and (3) control over the mineral shape during its formation. The latter phenomenon we termed pseudo-biomineralization. Our experiments indicate that pseudo-biomineralization is an active process obligatorily reliant on the external calcifying conditions and allowing considerable degree of control over mineral shape, thus producing structures reminiscent of true biominerals. Here, we describe this notion for the first time, thus providing vital insight into the genesis of a transitional stage to calcium carbonate-based biomineralization systems.",
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AU - Durak, Grażyna M.

AU - Laumann, Michael

AU - Wolf, Stefan L. P.

AU - Pawar, Atul

AU - Gebauer, Denis

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N1 - Funding Information: We gratefully acknowledge funding by the EU FP7 Marie Curie Zukunftskolleg Incoming Fellowship Program (TB), the Zukunftskolleg Research Fellowship (DG), the Emmy Noether program of the DFG (T.B.), the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie (T.B., A.P., and G.M.D.), the Konstanz Research School Chemical Biology KoRS-CB (T.B.), and the Brückenstipendium für Nachwuchswissenschaftlerinnen within the framework of the excellence initiative at the University of Konstanz (G.M.D.). G.M.D., D.G., and T.B. acknowledge financial support by the Young Scholar Fund provided by the University of Konstanz. The authors would like to thank the Bioimaging Centre for providing CLSM facilities at the University of Konstanz and also extend their thanks to Natalia Jezierska (AGH University of Science and Technology Kraków, Poland) for contributing towards titration experiments and to Dr. Masoud Farhadi-Khouzani for help with FT-IR analysis.

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