Colleary Caitlin, Dolocan Andrei, Gardner James, Singh Suresh, Wuttke Michael, Rabenstein Renate, Habersetzer Jörg, Schaal Stephan, Feseha Mulugeta, Clemens Matthew, Jacobs Bonnie F, Currano Ellen D, Jacobs Louis L, Sylvestersen Rene Lyng, Gabbott Sarah E, Vinther Jakob
School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1RJ, United Kingdom; Department of Geosciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24060;
Texas Materials Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Oct 13;112(41):12592-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1509831112. Epub 2015 Sep 28.
In living organisms, color patterns, behavior, and ecology are closely linked. Thus, detection of fossil pigments may permit inferences about important aspects of ancient animal ecology and evolution. Melanin-bearing melanosomes were suggested to preserve as organic residues in exceptionally preserved fossils, retaining distinct morphology that is associated with aspects of original color patterns. Nevertheless, these oblong and spherical structures have also been identified as fossilized bacteria. To date, chemical studies have not directly considered the effects of diagenesis on melanin preservation, and how this may influence its identification. Here we use time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry to identify and chemically characterize melanin in a diverse sample of previously unstudied extant and fossil taxa, including fossils with notably different diagenetic histories and geologic ages. We document signatures consistent with melanin preservation in fossils ranging from feathers, to mammals, to amphibians. Using principal component analyses, we characterize putative mixtures of eumelanin and phaeomelanin in both fossil and extant samples. Surprisingly, both extant and fossil amphibians generally exhibit melanosomes with a mixed eumelanin/phaeomelanin composition rather than pure eumelanin, as assumed previously. We argue that experimental maturation of modern melanin samples replicates diagenetic chemical alteration of melanin observed in fossils. This refutes the hypothesis that such fossil microbodies could be bacteria, and demonstrates that melanin is widely responsible for the organic soft tissue outlines in vertebrates found at exceptional fossil localities, thus allowing for the reconstruction of certain aspects of original pigment patterns.
在生物体内,颜色模式、行为和生态密切相关。因此,检测化石色素可能有助于推断古代动物生态和进化的重要方面。有人提出,含黑色素的黑素小体可作为有机残留物保存在保存异常完好的化石中,保留与原始颜色模式相关的独特形态。然而,这些长方形和球形结构也被鉴定为化石细菌。迄今为止,化学研究尚未直接考虑成岩作用对黑色素保存的影响,以及这可能如何影响其鉴定。在这里,我们使用飞行时间二次离子质谱法,对各种此前未研究过的现存和化石分类群样本中的黑色素进行鉴定和化学表征,这些样本包括具有显著不同成岩历史和地质年代的化石。我们记录了从羽毛到哺乳动物再到两栖动物等各类化石中与黑色素保存一致的特征。通过主成分分析,我们对化石和现存样本中真黑素和褐黑素的假定混合物进行了表征。令人惊讶的是,现存和化石两栖动物通常都表现出具有真黑素/褐黑素混合成分的黑素小体,而不是如先前假设的纯真黑素。我们认为,现代黑色素样本的实验成熟过程复制了化石中观察到的黑色素的成岩化学变化。这驳斥了此类化石微体可能是细菌的假说,并证明黑色素广泛地导致了在特殊化石地点发现的脊椎动物有机软组织轮廓的形成,从而使得重建原始色素模式的某些方面成为可能。