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Engineered Spider Silk Proteins for Biomimetic Spinning of Fibers with Toughness Equal to Dragline Silks

Advanced Functional Materials, ISSN: 1616-3028, Vol: 32, Issue: 23, Page: 2200986
2022
  • 60
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 71
    Captures
  • 3
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    60
  • Captures
    71
  • Mentions
    3
    • News Mentions
      2
      • 2
    • Blog Mentions
      1
      • Blog
        1

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Article Unraveling the Secrets of Spider Silk Spider silk is a remarkable material, offering high tensile strength and natural elasticity. In this article, learn how a group of scientists are currently exploring its untapped potential in medical and mater

Spider silk is a remarkable natural material that has captured the imagination of a group of scientists who are currently exploring its untapped potential in

Article Description

Spider silk is the toughest fiber found in nature, and bulk production of artificial spider silk that matches its mechanical properties remains elusive. Development of miniature spider silk proteins (mini-spidroins) has made large-scale fiber production economically feasible, but the fibers’ mechanical properties are inferior to native silk. The spider silk fiber's tensile strength is conferred by poly-alanine stretches that are zipped together by tight side chain packing in β-sheet crystals. Spidroins are secreted so they must be void of long stretches of hydrophobic residues, since such segments get inserted into the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. At the same time, hydrophobic residues have high β-strand propensity and can mediate tight inter-β-sheet interactions, features that are attractive for generation of strong artificial silks. Protein production in prokaryotes can circumvent biological laws that spiders, being eukaryotic organisms, must obey, and the authors thus design mini-spidroins that are predicted to more avidly form stronger β-sheets than the wildtype protein. Biomimetic spinning of the engineered mini-spidroins indeed results in fibers with increased tensile strength and two fiber types display toughness equal to native dragline silks. Bioreactor expression and purification result in a protein yield of ≈9 g L which is in line with requirements for economically feasible bulk scale production.

Bibliographic Details

Arndt, Tina; Greco, Gabriele; Schmuck, Benjamin; Bunz, Jessica; Shilkova, Olga; Francis, Juanita; Pugno, Nicola M; Jaudzems, Kristaps; Barth, Andreas; Johansson, Jan; Rising, Anna

Wiley

Materials Science; Chemistry; Physics and Astronomy

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