Quantum Magnetic Imaging of Iron Biomineralization in Teeth of the Chiton Acanthopleura hirtosa
At a Glance
Section titled āAt a Glanceā| Metadata | Details |
|---|---|
| Publication Date | 2020-01-19 |
| Journal | Small Methods |
| Authors | Julia M. McCoey, Mirai Matsuoka, Robert W. de Gille, Liam T. Hall, Jeremy Shaw |
| Institutions | The University of Melbourne, The University of Western Australia |
| Citations | 41 |
Abstract
Section titled āAbstractāAbstract Iron is critical for life. Nature capitalizes on the physical attributes of iron biominerals for functional, structural, and sensory applications. Iron biomineralization is well exemplified by the magnetiteābearing radula of chitons, the hardest known biomineral of any animal. Although magnetism is an integral property of iron biominerals, limited information exists on the magnetic state, structure, and orientation of these nanoscale materials during mineralization. The advent of quantumābased magnetic microscopy provides a new avenue to probe these biological systems directly, providing detailed magnetic information of the iron oxide structures. Here two complementary quantum magnetic microscopy methods are applied, based on nitrogenāvacancy centers in diamond, to spatially map the mineral phases ferrihydrite and magnetite in the developing teeth of the chiton Acanthopleura hirtosa . The images reveal previously undiscovered longārange magnetic order, established at the onset of magnetite mineralization. This is in contrast to electron microscopy studies that show no strong common crystallographic orientation. The implications of these results are important, not just for the insights gained in biomineralization of the target organism, but also for the study of a broad range of iron minerals in the physical and biological sciences.
Tech Support
Section titled āTech SupportāOriginal Source
Section titled āOriginal SourceāReferences
Section titled āReferencesā- 2016 - Iron Oxides: From Nature to Applications
- 1825 - Manuel de malacologie et de conchyliologie: contenant [etc.]. [Crossref]