First published online August 3, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 3219-3225 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02373
Critical role of zinc in hardening of Nereis jaws
Chris C. Broomell1,*,
Mike A. Mattoni2,
Frank W. Zok2 and
J. Herbert Waite1
1 Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University
of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA
2 Materials Department, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa
Barbara, CA 93106, USA

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Fig. 1. Distribution of major inorganic components in a Nereis jaw cross
section. (A) Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of a complete
Nereis jaw. Embedded jaws were prepared by trimming to the plane
indicated (red disc) with a diamond knife. Energy dispersive X-ray
spectroscopy (EDS) maps of (B) untreated, (C) Tris-treated and (D)
EDTA-treated jaw surfaces. Untreated and Tris-treated images are of a single
jaw (EDTA treatment was done on a different jaw - distributions of Zn, Cl and
Br prior to EDTA treatment were indistinguishable to those in untreated jaws).
EDTA treatment, but not incubation in Tris alone, removes Zn and Cl in three
distinct regions of the jaw cross section (white arrows). Zn loss is more
prevalent in Br-free regions of the sample. Scale bar, 100 µm (cross
sections only).
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Fig. 2. Effects of EDTA treatment of jaws with uniform Br distribution. (A)
Untreated, (B) EDTA-treated jaws. A minority of jaws analyzed exhibited
uniform Br levels through the cross section. All other inorganic components
exhibit standard distribution profiles (A). Treatment of these samples with
EDTA does not lead to Zn or Cl loss. This suggests that bromination (or
associated processes) may play a role in stabilizing metal coordination in the
jaw matrix. Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Fig. 3. Secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) depth profiles of Zn following EDTA
treatment. EDTA treatment results in significant decrease of Zn in the top 16
µm of the jaw surface compared with the values observed after Tris
treatment. Measurements were taken in regions that were free of Br, and Zn
counts were normalized to carbon to compensate for fluctuations in signal
intensity throughout the course of analysis. Signal traces for both Zn
isotopes are presented.
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Fig. 4. Nanoindentation of dry Nereis jaw surface. Representative
load-displacement curve from nanoindentation of a prepared jaw from
Nereis. Surfaces were indented with a 90° cube-cornered diamond
tip at 100 µN s-1 to a maximum load of 500 µN and held for 1
min. Decrease in force axis indicates viscoelastic relaxation of the sample
prior to unloading. Hardness is determined as a function of the total
displacement of the tip into the sample. Modulus is derived from the slope of
the unloading curve.
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Fig. 5. Chemical and mechanical characterization of Nereis jaws following
Zn manipulation. EDS Zn maps of jaw cross sections (A) before treatment, (B)
after treatment with EDTA and (C) following treatment in ZnCl2.
Indents were made following each treatment in regions indicated by the white
lines (B). Both lines include indents in Zn-depleted and Zn-rich zones. (D)
Hardness, H, and Young's modulus, E, are presented as a
function of lateral position across the sample surface. Comparison of
untreated (red line) and EDTA treated (blue line) samples indicates that both
H and E are substantially decreased in regions where Zn has
been removed. A significant recovery of initial H and E is
observed following reconstitution of Zn in these regions (green line).
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Fig. 6. Comparison of Nereis jaws to synthetic engineering polymers. Shown
is a materials property chart comparing hardness H and Young's
modulus E of Nereis jaws (in water) (pristine and without
Zn) with those of synthetic engineering polymers. Theoretical limits for these
properties are represented by the broken lines.
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Fig. 7. Schematic of proposed cross-linking in Nereis jaws. Zn-mediated
cross-linking of histidine-rich proteins is proposed to be responsible for
enhanced hardness and modulus in Nereis jaws. Cross-linking may be
intramolecular (black complexes) or intermolecular (grey complexes).
Additional cross-linking via di-and/or tri-tyrosine formation is not
expected to contribute significantly to mechanical properties of the bulk
jaw.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2006