
thumb|Insect exoskeleton (comprising sclerotin): abandoned exuviae of a dragonfly
thumb|Insect exoskeleton (comprising sclerotin): abandoned exuviae of a dragonfly
Sclerotin is a component of the cuticle of various Arthropoda, most familiarly insects. It is formed by cross-linking members of particular classes of protein molecules, a biochemical process called sclerotization, a form of tanning in which quinones are enzymatically introduced into the cuticle, and react with terminal and lysine-related amino groups in the proteins to form strong links between the molecules. The resulting material greatly increases the rigidity of an insect's chitinous exoskeleton, which is otherwise fairly soft. It is particularly prominent in the thicker, armoured parts of insect and arachnid integument, such as in the biting mouthparts and sclerites of scorpions and beetles.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).