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Echinobase
ECB-ART-51988
Dev Growth Differ 1976 Jan 01;184:413-434. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-169X.1976.00413.x.
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CRYSTAL PROPERTY OF THE LARVAL SEA URCHIN SPICULE.

Okazaki K , Inoué S .


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A pair of pluteus skeletal spicules arises from a pair of calcareous granules via the triradiate form. In polarized light, each spicule behaves as though carved out of a single crystal of magnesian calcite. The optic axis lies perpendicular to the plane of the triradiate and parallel to the body rod of the pluteus. However, in the scanning electron microscope, the spicule surface appeared smooth or somewhat spongy and manifested no crystal faces. Neither etching nor fracturing revealed underlying crystalline texture. Nevertheless, rhombohedral calcite crystals could be grown epitaxially onto isolated spicules immersed in a medium containing CaCl2 and NaHCO3 . The optic axes of all crystals coincided with the optic axis of the spicule on which they were grown. Corresponding faces of the crystals were all aligned parallel to each other despite the complex shape of each spicule. Where the left and right spicules joined, two mutually tilted sets of crystals were observed but not crystals of intermediate orientation. Thus, the sea urchin larval spicule is built from a stack of molecularly contiguous microcrystals but its overall shape is generated by the mesenchyme cells independent of the magnesian calcite crystal habit.

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