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Preservation of corneous β-proteins in fossil feathers (1 Viewer)

albertonykus

Well-known member
Slater, T.S., N.P. Edwards, S.M. Webb, F. Zhang, and M.E. McNamara (2023)
Preservation of corneous β-proteins in Mesozoic feathers
Nature Ecology and Evolution (advance online publication)
doi: 10.1038/s41559-023-02177-8

Fossil proteins are valuable tools in evolutionary biology. Recent technological advances and better integration of experimental methods have confirmed the feasibility of biomolecular preservation in deep time, yielding new insights into the timing of key evolutionary transitions. Keratins (formerly α-keratins) and corneous β-proteins (CBPs, formerly β-keratins) are of particular interest as they define tissue structures that underpin fundamental physiological and ecological strategies and have the potential to inform on the molecular evolution of the vertebrate integument. Reports of CBPs in Mesozoic fossils, however, appear to conflict with experimental evidence for CBP degradation during fossilization. Further, the recent model for molecular modification of feather chemistry during the dinosaur–bird transition does not consider the relative preservation potential of different feather proteins. Here we use controlled taphonomic experiments coupled with infrared and sulfur X-ray spectroscopy to show that the dominant β-sheet structure of CBPs is progressively altered to α-helices with increasing temperature, suggesting that (α-)keratins and α-helices in fossil feathers are most likely artefacts of fossilization. Our analyses of fossil feathers shows that this process is independent of geological age, as even Cenozoic feathers can comprise primarily α-helices and disordered structures. Critically, our experiments show that feather CBPs can survive moderate thermal maturation. As predicted by our experiments, analyses of Mesozoic feathers confirm that evidence of feather CBPs can persist through deep time.
 
Zhao, T. and Y. Pan (2024)
Transformation of β-sheets into disordered structures during the fossilization of feathers
Nature Ecology and Evolution 8: 1233–1235
doi: 10.1038/s41559-024-02432-6

First paragraph reproduced below:

Slater et al. analysed the chemical composition of untreated and experimentally degraded feathers from extant birds and fossils. The authors concluded that the dominant β-sheet structure of corneous β-proteins progressively undergoes alteration to α-helices with increasing temperature and suggested that (α-)keratins and α-helices in fossil feathers are probably artefacts of fossilization. However, we contend that the infrared data they presented could alternatively support the transformation of the β-sheet structure into disordered structures rather than α-helices. Moreover, we posit that their interpretation of the infrared data for fossil feathers from the Cretaceous overlooks the potential contributions of eumelanin residues.

Slater, T.S., N.P. Edwards, S.M. Webb, F. Zhang, and M.E. McNamara (2024)
Reply to: Transformation of β-sheets into disordered structures during the fossilization of feathers
Nature Ecology and Evolution 8: 1236–1237
doi: 10.1038/s41559-024-02431-7

First paragraph reproduced below:

Our recent study presents evidence for the preservation of remnant corneous β-proteins (CBPs) in experimentally matured and Mesozoic fossil feathers. This evidence was obtained using infrared spectroscopy and synchrotron-based X-ray spectroscopy. We argue that these analytical techniques, when combined, offer a new and rapid method for the detection of traces of ancient proteins. The use of sulfur X-ray spectroscopy provides evidence on CBP protein tertiary structure (disulfide bonds); infrared spectroscopy allows the identification of various protein secondary structures via deconvolution of the amide I and II bands. Our study demonstrates that deconvolution of the amide bands in spectra from experimentally matured and fossil feathers reveals a transformation of the β-sheets in CBPs to α-helices with increasing thermal maturation.
 

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