Search results for "mollusque"
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Biominéralisation chez les Céphalopodes (Mollusca) : processus moléculaires et évolution
2021
Molluscs constitute one of the most diversified phyla within metazoans, known for their ability to mineralize a shell. The shell biomineralization is a genetically controlled process that is performed extracellularly via a calcifying organic matrix. This latter, which remains finally occluded (at least, partially) into the shell, is a mixture of proteins, glycoproteins, lipids and polysaccharides, that are collectively secreted by the external calcifying epithelium of the mantle. Today, the shell matrix is usually considered as the ‘molecular toolbox’ for constructing the shell. Since its discovery, it has been the focus of numerous studies, but mainly on bivalves and gastropods leaving cep…
Evolution des biominéralisations nacrées chez les mollusques : caractérisation moléculaire des matrices coquillières du céphalopode nautiloïde Nautil…
2008
In metazoan, molluscan shells are one of the most fascinating examples for the investigation of the calcium carbonate biomineralization phenomenon. These exoskeletons are secreted by the outer epithelium of the calcifying mantle. They are composed of 95% of mineral – calcite and/or aragonite -, the rest of the shells being constituted by a mixture of proteins, glycoproteins and polysaccharides, called the organic matrix. This calcifying matrix is directly involved in biomineralization. This PhD work is focussed on the characterization of organic components associated to the nacreous layer. In molluscs, the nacre is observed in shells of extent species of bivalves, gastropods, cephalopods an…