Nick Vatakis’s research while affiliated with The Graduate Center, CUNY and other places

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Publications (1)


Antibiotic properties of porcupine quills
  • Article

March 1990

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534 Reads

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33 Citations

Journal of Chemical Ecology

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Nick Vatakis

Porcupine quills possess antibiotic properties. The antibiotic activity is associated with free fatty acids (but not neutral lipids) coating the quills. Extracts of quill fatty acids strongly inhibited the growth of six grampositive bacterial strains. No growth inhibition was observed against four gram-negative strains. Free fatty acids made up 18.6% of total quill lipids in samples collected in the summer, and 5.5% of total lipid in samples collected in the winter. The fatty acids were separated and identified (as the methyl esters) by gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectroscopy. Major components of a complex mixture included 14-methylpentadecanoic, 9-hexadecenoic, hexadecanoic, and 9-octadecenoic acids. It is suggested that porcupines benefit from the quill fatty acids: evidence from healed fractures of major skeletal components (35.1% incidence in 37 skeletons examined) suggests that porcupines fall relatively frequently from trees. Quill antibiotics may limit self-injury suffered in such falls.

Citations (1)


... Upon being impaled, the quills are readily released from the porcupine's skin through a mechanism of rupture in the anchoring tissue near the quill root (Chapman and Roze 1997;Roze 2002). The quills can progressively enter into the opponent's muscular tissue, becoming difficult to remove and causing considerable damage to the tissue owing to the backward orientation of the microscopic barbs (Cho et al. 2012;Roze 2009;Roze, Locke, and Vatakis 1990). ...

Reference:

Defensive Behavior and Integumentary Morphology of the Hairy Dwarf Porcupine Coendou spinosus (Rodentia: Erethizontidae)
Antibiotic properties of porcupine quills
  • Citing Article
  • March 1990

Journal of Chemical Ecology