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Natural sciences
- Ecophysiology and ecomorphology
Optical nanostructures are highly organized composites of materials with varying refractive indices (e.g. keratin, melanin and air) that produce some of the brightest colors found in nature through coherent light scattering. How these tissues organise themselves at the nanometer scale to produce colors is poorly understood, despite its fundamental significance to developmental and evolutionary biology and potential to spark advances in the biomimetic design and "green" commercial manufacture of self-assembling optical materials.
We thus propose to use both transcriptomic, x-ray scattering and microscopy-based tools of developmental biology to elucidate the mechanisms by which these nanostructures self-assemble in a subsample of birds (Class Aves), a group with incredibly diverse structural colors and mechanisms. Our working hypothesis is that iridescent colors form through depletion-attraction, phase separation and other self-assembly mechanisms. Because most developmental biology is done at larger size scales, testing these hypotheses will require the use and development of methods such as wet cell TEM and in situ laser diffraction analysis to adequately resolve nanometer-scale changes in developing tissue. We will then test these proposed mechanisms using biomimetic approaches that replicate natural conditions as closely as possible (e.g. at room temperature,at biological pH) using natural or semi-natural materials. Use of optical techniques including angle-resolved spectrophotometry and microspectrophotometry will enable us to compare these properties between the natural and synthetic versions. This approach will enable us to not only experimentally test modes of development but also generate and test new materials and/or processes to produce them.
There are three highly innovative aspects to this proposal. First, it attempts to unlock the developmental pathways producing nanostructured tissues. This is a long-standing question with few answers thus far. Second, it uses biomimicry in novel ways to test developmental hypotheses and pushes the technical boundaries of developmental biology by focusing on nanometer-scale organisation of tissues. Finally, the use of biologically realistic chemistry in our biomimetic approaches is a huge leap forward in this field where most work is done at high temperature or with non-biocompatible materials. This work will therefore significantly advance both our fundamental understanding of these materials and the tools to study them and other nanoscale materials.