Centuries-old planktonic shell mystery solved with discovery of self-assembling proteins

Centuries-old planktonic shell mystery solved with discovery of self-assembling proteins
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Why This Matters

Scientific discoveries like this expand human knowledge and open new possibilities for addressing global challenges.
Biomaterials with extraordinary properties, such as spider silk, have so far been known primarily from animals. Researchers at the University of Salzburg in Austria have now deciphered a surprising counterpart from the world of single-celled organisms: The shells of tintinnids, microscopic planktonic organisms, consist of self-assembling structural proteins that form a particularly resilient material and are capable of absorbing UV light. This is the first description of a biomaterial produced by a eukaryotic single-celled organism (protist), establishing tintinnids as a new model system fo...
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