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Arms and the mollusc: An evolutionary arms race has produced armor based on molluscan biomineralization

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MRS BULLETIN
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1557/s43577-023-00594-5

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Molluscs; Nacre; Biomaterials; Biocomposites; Evolution; Escalation

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Over 500 million years ago, molluscs developed shells as biomineral exoskeletons in response to the evolution of predators developing jaws and other novel means of devouring them. These shells are composed of multiple layers with specific microstructures, resulting from the coevolution with increasingly deadly predators. The study of molluscan biomineralization provides insights into how a biological process generates complex structures.
More than half a billion years ago in the early Cambrian period, there began an evolutionary arms race between molluscs and their predators, in which molluscs developed armor in the form of a biomineral exoskeleton-a shell-to avoid being eaten by predators that were developing jaws and other novel means of devouring them. The mollusc fabricates multiple layers of shell, each of a particular microstructure of a composite between an inorganic and an organic phase, which are the end result of more than 500 million years of coevolution with increasingly deadly predators. Molluscan biomineralization is an excellent case to study how a biological process produces a complex structure, because the shell is constructed as an extracellular structure in which all construction materials are passed out of the cells to self-assemble outside the cell wall. We consider what is known of the development of multilayer composite armor in the form of nacre (mother of pearl) and the other strong microstructures with which molluscs construct their shells.

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