posted on 2016-07-16, 00:00authored byGaurav Jain, Martin Pendola, Ashit Rao, Helmut Cölfen, John Spencer Evans
In
the purple sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, the formation and mineralization of fracture-resistant skeletal
elements such as the embryonic spicule require the combinatorial participation
of numerous spicule matrix proteins such as the SpSM30A–F isoforms.
However, because of limited abundance, it has been difficult to pursue
extensive biochemical studies of the SpSM30 proteins and deduce their
role in spicule formation and mineralization. To circumvent these
problems, we expressed a model recombinant spicule matrix protein,
rSpSM30B/C, which possesses the key sequence attributes of isoforms “B”
and “C”. Our findings indicate that rSpSM30B/C is expressed
in insect cells as a single polypeptide containing variations in glycosylation
that create microheterogeneity in rSpSM30B/C molecular masses. These
post-translational modifications incorporate O- and N-glycans and
anionic mono- and bisialylated and mono- and bisulfated monosaccharides
on the protein molecules and enhance its aggregation propensity. Bioinformatics
and biophysical experiments confirm that rSpSM30B/C is an intrinsically
disordered, aggregation-prone protein that forms porous protein hydrogels that control the in vitro mineralization
process in three ways: (1) increase the time interval for prenucleation
cluster formation and transiently stabilize an ACC polymorph, (2)
promote and organize single-crystal calcite nanoparticles, and (3)
promote faceted growth and create surface texturing of calcite crystals.
These features are also common to mollusk shell nacre proteins, and
we conclude that rSpSM30B/C is a spiculogenesis protein that exhibits
traits found in other calcium carbonate mineral modification proteins.