PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Iron preserves, hides ancient tissues in fossilized remains

2013-11-27
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Tracey Peake
tracey_peake@ncsu.edu
919-515-6142
North Carolina State University
Iron preserves, hides ancient tissues in fossilized remains New research from North Carolina State University shows that iron may play a role in preserving ancient tissues within dinosaur fossils, but also may hide them from detection. The finding could open the door to the recovery of more ancient tissues from within fossils.

Mary Schweitzer, an NC State paleontologist with a joint appointment at the N. C. Museum of Natural Sciences, first announced the surprising preservation of soft tissues in a T. rex fossil in 2005. Her subsequent work identified proteins in the soft tissue that seemed to confirm that the tissue was indeed T. rex tissue that had been preserved for millions of years. But the findings remained controversial in part because no one understood the chemical processes behind such preservation.

Schweitzer's latest research shows that the presence of hemoglobin – the iron-containing molecule that transports oxygen in red blood cells – may be the key to both preserving and concealing original ancient proteins within fossils. Her results appear in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

"Iron is necessary for survival, but it's also highly reactive and destructive in living tissues, which is why our bodies have proteins that transport iron molecules to where they are needed but protect us from unwanted reactions at the same time," Schweitzer says. "When we die, that protective mechanism breaks down and the iron is turned loose on our tissues – and that destructive process can act in much the same way formaldehyde does to preserve the tissues and proteins."

Hemoglobin seems to be the key. Both birds and crocodiles, the dinosaur's closest living relatives, have large, nucleated red blood cells. Therefore they also have more hemoglobin per cell than mammals. If dinosaur blood cells were similar to either one of those species, which seems likely, then their blood cells would also contain much more hemoglobin than human cells, amplifying iron's preservative effect on the tissues. If the hemoglobin were contained in a bone in a sandstone environment, keeping it dry and insulated from microbes, preservation becomes more likely.

Schweitzer and her team noticed that iron particles are intimately associated with the soft tissues preserved in dinosaurs. But when they chelated – or removed the iron from – soft tissues taken from a T. rex and a Brachyolophosaurus, the chelated tissues reacted much more strongly to antibodies that detect the presence of protein, suggesting that the iron may be masking their presence in these preserved tissues. They then tested the preservation hypothesis by using blood vessels and cells taken from modern ostrich bone. They soaked some of these vessels in hemoglobin taken from red blood cells, while placing other vessels in water. Two years later, the hemoglobin-treated soft vessels remained intact, while those soaked in water degraded in less than a week.

"We know that iron is always present in large quantities when we find well-preserved fossils, and we have found original vascular tissues within the bones of these animals, which would be a very hemoglobin-rich environment after they died," Schweitzer says. "We also know that iron hinders just about every technique we have to detect proteins. So iron looks like it may be both the mechanism for preservation and the reason why we've had problems finding and analyzing proteins that are preserved."

###

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Research assistant Wenxia Zhang and former graduate student Timothy Cleland (now at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) contributed to the work, which was also done in collaboration with scientists at University of California-Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Labs, and the Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute (CHORI).

Note to editors: An abstract of the paper follows.

"A role for iron and oxygen chemistry in preserving soft tissues, cells and molecules from deep time"

Authors: Mary H. Schweitzer, Wenxia Zheng, Timothy P. Cleland, North Carolina State University; Mark Goodwin, Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley; Elizabeth Boatman, University of California Berkeley; Elizabeth Theil, CHORI and North Carolina State University; Matthew A. Markus and Sirine C. Fakra, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley
Published: Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Abstract: The persistence of original soft tissues in Mesozoic fossil bone 29 is not explained chemically by current chemical degradation models. We identified iron particles [goethite-αFeO(OH)] associated with soft tissues recovered from two Mesozoic dinosaurs, using TEM, EELS, μXRD, and Fe μXANES. Iron chelators increased fossil tissue immunoreactivity to multiple antibodies dramatically, suggesting a role for iron in both preserving and masking proteins in fossil tissues. Hemoglobin (HB) increased tissue stability ~50-fold, from ~ 3days to >six months at room temperature (25oC) in an ostrich blood vessel model developed to test postmortem "tissue fixation" by crosslinking or peroxidation. HB-induced solution hypoxia coupled with iron chelation enhances preservation as follows: HB + O2 > HB - O2 > - O2 >> + O2. The well-known O2/heme interactions in the chemistry of life, such as respiration and bioenergetics, are complemented by O2/heme interactions in the preservation of fossil soft tissues.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Screening new inmates for HIV may not reveal many new undetected cases, study shows

2013-11-27
Screening new inmates for HIV may not reveal many new undetected cases, study shows CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – More than 90 percent of HIV-infected inmates entering prison in North Carolina had previously tested positive for the virus, according ...

Gratitude or guilt? People spend more when they 'pay it forward'

2013-11-27
Gratitude or guilt? People spend more when they 'pay it forward' UC Berkeley study finds we are more generous when covering the cost of others As shoppers across the nation prepare to pounce on Black Friday sales, researchers at UC Berkeley are looking ...

Finding hidden circles may improve social network privacy settings

2013-11-27
Finding hidden circles may improve social network privacy settings Creating a computer program to find relationships in networks, such as Google Plus and Facebook, may help users more easily set up and maintain privacy settings, according to researchers. "We want to help users ...

Inexpensive 'nano-camera' can operate at the speed of light

2013-11-27
Inexpensive 'nano-camera' can operate at the speed of light Device could be used in medical imaging, collision-avoidance detectors for cars, and interactive gaming CAMBRIDGE, Mass -- A $500 "nano-camera" that can operate at the speed of light has been developed ...

Drug reduces brain changes, motor deficits associated with Huntington's disease

2013-11-27
Drug reduces brain changes, motor deficits associated with Huntington's disease Animal study supports disease therapies that mimic the action of growth-promoting proteins in brain WASHINGTON, DC — A drug that acts like a growth-promoting protein in the brain ...

Scientists discover how leukemia cells exploit 'enhancer' DNA elements to cause lethal disease

2013-11-27
Scientists discover how leukemia cells exploit 'enhancer' DNA elements to cause lethal disease Discovery also reveals how a drug, now in multiple human trials, halts production of Myc protein and stops progression of AML Cold Spring Harbor, NY – A team of ...

Kessler stroke researchers explore five new avenues for rehabilitation research

2013-11-27
Kessler stroke researchers explore five new avenues for rehabilitation research Treatments based on behavioral or non-invasive physiological stimulation show greatest potential West Orange, NJ. November 26, 2013. Because the concept of permanent neurological ...

Health insurance increases preventive care but not risky behaviors

2013-11-27
Health insurance increases preventive care but not risky behaviors (SACRAMENTO, Calif.) -- People with health insurance are more likely to use preventive services such as flu shots and health screenings to reduce their risk of serious ...

National study finds donor age not a factor in most corneal transplants

2013-11-27
National study finds donor age not a factor in most corneal transplants (SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — Ten years after a transplant, a cornea from a 71-year-old donor is likely to remain as healthy as a cornea from a donor half that age, and ...

A celebration of a Persian mystic leads to better understanding of dynamics

2013-11-27
A celebration of a Persian mystic leads to better understanding of dynamics James Hanna likes to have fun with his engineering views of physics. So when he and his colleague Jemal Guven visited their friend Martin Michael Müller in France on a rainy, dreary day, the three ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Dating is not broken, but the trajectories of relationships have changed

Global study identifies markers for the five clinical stages of Parkinson’s disease

Bacterial cellulose promotes plant tissue regeneration

Biohybrid hand gestures with human muscles

Diabetes can drive the evolution of antibiotic resistance

ChatGPT has the potential to improve psychotherapeutic processes

Prioritise vaccine boosters for vulnerable immunocompromised patients and prevent emergence of new COVID variants, say scientists

California's most economically and culturally important species among those most vulnerable to projected climate change

Scientists develop novel self-healing electronic skin for health monitoring

Models show intensifying wildfires in a warming world due to changes in vegetation and humidity; only a minor role for lightning

Unraveling the complex role of climate in dengue dynamics

INSEAD celebrates five years of impact in North America during its second Americas Conference 2025

MAGE-4 promotes tumor progression by halting antitumor responses

Economically, culturally important marine species vulnerable to changing climate, new study shows

Tennessee professor receives SAEA Emerging Scholar Award

Sea turtles’ secret GPS: researchers uncover how sea turtles learn locations using Earth's magnetic field

Mayo Clinic researchers and surgeons test virtual reality to calm presurgery jitters

Mothers with incarcerated children shoulder emotional and financial burdens

Adults can learn absolute pitch: new research challenges long-held musical belief

Loneliness and social isolation linked to increased risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, study finds

Exotic observations with neutrons at the ILL

Scientists discover new gene-to-gene interaction increasing risk of alopecia

Chinese scientists find key genes to fight against crop parasites

Lung cancer cells can go ‘off grid’

An RNA inhibitor may effectively reduce a high-risk type of cholesterol in patients with cardiovascular disease

Research spotlight: Mapping lesions that cause psychosis to a human brain circuit and proposed stimulation target

New study identifies brain region that can prevent aggressive social behavior and induce pro social behavior

Telehealth may be closing the care gap for people with substance use disorder in rural areas

Stronger, safer, smarter: pioneering Zinc-based dissolvable implants for bone repair

Could peripheral neuropathy be stopped before it starts?

[Press-News.org] Iron preserves, hides ancient tissues in fossilized remains