Octopus inspire new camouflage strategies for military applications

Published 14 November 2007

New in personal protection equipment: The remarkable shape- and color-changing abilities of the octopus and its close relatives inspire researchers to attempt to understand one of nature’s most stunning feats of camouflage and self-preservation — and see whether such techniques can be applied in the military

Cephalopods — the ungainly octopus, squid, and cuttlefish — are experts in the art of camouflage. They can make themselves look like fish, rocks, coral, or sand, thwarting predators thanks to the highly evolved camouflaging mechanism of their skin. Scientists are now trying to decipher the secrets of cephalopod skin, hoping to find the mechanisms which make these creatures masters of disguise. Studying their artful concealment could provide new camouflage strategies for military applications. Cephalopods have evolved complex camouflaging mechanisms because almost every creature that they encounter finds them to be delicious, and because they have no other defense mechanism, Lydia Mäthger, a research associate in Roger Hanlon’s group at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, told Bethany Halford of Chemical Engineering News. “They’re basically just a big chunk of protein out in the sea,” she says. Consequently, the animals spend their entire day camouflaged, shifting their form to hide from predators. Each layer of a cephalopod’s skin has a specific function for concealing the creature. The innermost layer uses light-scattering leucophore cells to reflect ambient light. Under white light, for example, the leucophores look white. These give the cephalopods a sort of base coat that helps them to match their surroundings. The outermost layer of a cephalopod’s skin allows the animal to change color. It is full of chromatophores, which are “essentially little balloons, perhaps a millimeter in diameter, that are filled with red, yellow, or brown pigment,” Mäthger says. When the muscles attached to each chromatophore contract, they pull the pigment sack outward, expanding regions of color on the skin. When the muscles relax, the chromatophores close back up.

Cephalopods have variable numbers of chromatophores: from forty for deep-water squid to more than a million for octopuses and cuttlefish. Nerves connect the chromatophores directly to the animal’s brain, so the creature does not have to rely upon hormones or some other signaling mechanism in order to change color. Between the colorful chromatophores and the light-scattering leucophores is a reflective layer of skin made up of iridophores. These cells reflect color and are responsible for the blue, green, gold, and silver shades in the animal’s skin. Not much is known about the molecular mechanisms behind a cephalopod’s mysterious skin, but researchers are concentrating on the reflective proteins which make up the iridophores. Most marine organisms get their reflective properties from purine crystals in their skin, but in cephalopods, reflectance arises from proteins known as reflectins. These proteins form stacked-pancake-like structures — called platelets — within the skin. The platelets create thin-film interference that the creature can use to manipulate incident light. “These are very unusual proteins,” says Rajesh Naik, the lead biotechnology researcher at the Air Force Research Laboratory in Dayton, Ohio. Their amino acid sequence is unlike that of any known protein, Naik says. About 57 percent of the protein is made up of four relatively rare amino acids — tyrosine, methionine, arginine, and tryptophan. Meanwhile, the amino acids alanine, leucine, isoleucine, and lysine are completely absent from the protein. “We don’t have a good understanding of the reflectins’ structure in vivo,” Wendy Crookes-Goodson, a research scientist in Naik’s group, told Halford. By studying the materials properties of reflectins in vitro, the research team hopes they will gain new insights for materials design.

Now we move from the octopus to here-and-now applications. “The protein has very unusual behavior that can be exploited for other applications,” Naik says. “You can make very nice thin films out of the protein, and the films respond to their environment.” For example, thin films cast from reflectins have the highest known index of refraction of films made from any naturally occurring protein. When exposed to water, methanol, and ethanol vapors, these films swell, shifting their reflected color from red to blue. Naik’s team also found that reflectins cast into a thin film from an ionic liquid solution will organize themselves into diffraction gratings that are defect-free over a length of several millimeters. Their ability to self-assemble in this manner suggests that the materials could be useful for photonic applications, Naik says. Questions about reflectins remain. though. How did such an unusual protein evolve? What can we infer about how a cephalopod uses reflectin from the protein’s behavior in vitro? How can we translate what we know about these creatures’ skin into a modern camouflaging system? These are the questions.

-further reading:

-Bethany Halford, “Hide And Seek: Cephalopod Camouflage Inspires Materials Research,” Chemical Engineering News 85, no. 46 (November 2007): 49-50 (sub. req.)

-Ryan M. Kramer, Wendy J. Crookes-Goodson, and Rajesh R. Naik, “The Self-organizing Properties of Squid Reflectin Protein,” Nature Materials 6, (3 June 2007): 533-38 (doi:10.1038/nmat1930) (sub. req.)