Publication:
Non-Skeletal Biomineralization by Eukaryotes: Matters of Moment and Gravity

Thumbnail Image

Date

2010

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Raven, John A., and Andrew H. Knoll. 2010. Non-skeletal biomineralization by eukaryotes: matters of moment and gravity. Geomicrobiology Journal 27(6&7): 572-584.

Research Data

Abstract

Skeletal biomineralisation by microbial eukaryotes significantly affects the global biogeochemical cycles of carbon, silicon and calcium. Non-skeletal biomineralisation by eukaryotic cells, with precipitates retained within the cell interior, can duplicate some of the functions of skeletal minerals, e.g., increased cell density, but not the mechanical and antibiophage functions of extracellular biominerals. However, skeletal biomineralisation does not duplicate many of the functions of non-skeletal biominerals. These functions include magnetotaxis (magnetite), gravity sensing (intracellular barite, bassanite, celestite and gypsum), buffering and storage of elements in an osmotically inactive form (calcium as carbonate, oxalate, polyphosphate and sulfate; phosphate as polyphosphate) and acid-base regulation, disposing of excess hydroxyl ions via an osmotically inactive product (calcium carbonate, calcium oxalate). Although polyphosphate has a wide phylogenetic distribution among microbial eukaryotes, other non-skeletal minerals have more restricted distributions, and as yet there seems to be no definitive evidence that the alkaline earth components (Ba and Sr) of barite and celestite are essential for completion of the life cycle in organisms that produce these minerals.

Description

Other Available Sources

Keywords

ballast, barite, bassanite, calcium carbonate, calcium oxalate, celestite, gypsum, magnetite, magnetotaxis, polyphosphate, statoliths

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Open Access Policy Articles (OAP), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories

Story
Non-Skeletal Biomineralization by Eukaryotes: Matters of… : DASH Story 2013-04-23
This information is very helpful and I didn't find it available elsewhere. Thanks!
Story
Non-Skeletal Biomineralization by Eukaryotes: Matters of… : DASH Story 2015-01-24
I am hoping to get a place on an Oxford PhD scheme and for this I have to put together a mini project proposal. It is hard to put together an application that is academically rigorous without citing a range of literature, and it is not possible to cite literature unless you have read it. Without access to journal articles such as this, it would be very difficult to create a well referenced document and would skew favour towards potential candidates who could afford/were already enrolled in institutions that could afford the widest journal access. So thank you for making this document open access - it might help land me a PhD :)