Spider Silk Fibers Spun from Soluble Recombinant Silk Produced in Mammalian Cells
Top Cited Papers
- 18 January 2002
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 295 (5554) , 472-476
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1065780
Abstract
Spider silks are protein-based “biopolymer” filaments or threads secreted by specialized epithelial cells as concentrated soluble precursors of highly repetitive primary sequences. Spider dragline silk is a flexible, lightweight fiber of extraordinary strength and toughness comparable to that of synthetic high-performance fibers. We sought to “biomimic” the process of spider silk production by expressing in mammalian cells the dragline silk genes ( ADF-3 / MaSpII and MaSpI ) of two spider species. We produced soluble recombinant (rc)–dragline silk proteins with molecular masses of 60 to 140 kilodaltons. We demonstrated the wet spinning of silk monofilaments spun from a concentrated aqueous solution of soluble rc–spider silk protein (ADF-3; 60 kilodaltons) under modest shear and coagulation conditions. The spun fibers were water insoluble with a fine diameter (10 to 40 micrometers) and exhibited toughness and modulus values comparable to those of native dragline silks but with lower tenacity. Dope solutions with rc–silk protein concentrations >20% and postspinning draw were necessary to achieve improved mechanical properties of the spun fibers. Fiber properties correlated with finer fiber diameter and increased birefringence.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Extreme Diversity, Conservation, and Convergence of Spider Silk Fibroin SequencesScience, 2001
- Regenerated Spider Silk: Processing, Properties, and StructureMacromolecules, 2000
- Artificial Spinning of Spider SilkMacromolecules, 1998
- A Microfabricated Wet-Spinning Apparatus To Spin Fibers of Silk Proteins. Structure−Property CorrelationsMacromolecules, 1998
- Comparative Structural Characterization of Naturally- and Synthetically-Spun Fibers of Bombyx mori FibroinMacromolecules, 1998
- Expression and Purification of a Spider Silk Protein: A New Strategy for Producing Repetitive ProteinsProtein Expression and Purification, 1996
- Silk Properties Determined by Gland-Specific Expression of a Spider Fibroin Gene FamilyScience, 1996
- Construction, Cloning, and Expression of Synthetic Genes Encoding Spider Dragline SilkBiochemistry, 1995
- Silk: Biology, Structure, Properties, and GeneticsPublished by American Chemical Society (ACS) ,1993
- The structure and properties of spider silkEndeavour, 1986