|
|
||||
|
Mirror, Mirror in the Squid...
The Scientist 2004, 18(2):12
|
||||
|
|
||||
|
When postdoctoral researcher Wendy Crookes and colleagues at the University of Hawaii-Manoa searched for membrane proteins that allow the immune system of the Hawaiian bobtail squid, Euprymna scolopes, to recognize the bioluminescent symbiotic bacteria, Vibrio fischeri, the unexpected turned up. Instead of finding membrane proteins, Crookes says they found proteins with similar characteristics that form hundreds of stacks of reflective platelets in the squid's light organ reflector.[1]
These tiny platelets serve as mirrors, reflecting and intensifying light produced by Vibrio, which reside in specific areas of the squid's body. "Nobody knew what the proteins of the reflector were," she says.
|