| Synthetic spider silk: a modular fiber Trends in Biotechnology, Volume 18, Issue 9, 1 September 2000, Pages 374-379 Michael B Hinman, Justin A Jones and Randolph V Lewis Abstract Spiders make their webs and perform a wide range of tasks with up to seven different types of silk fiber. These different fibers allow a comparison of structure with function, because each silk has distinct mechanical properties and is composed of peptide modules that confer those properties. By using genetic engineering to mix the modules in specific proportions, proteins with defined strength and elasticity can be designed, which have many potential medical and engineering uses. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (167 kb) |
| Spider silks and their applications Trends in Biotechnology, Volume 26, Issue 5, 1 May 2008, Pages 244-251 Jonathan A. Kluge, Olena Rabotyagova, Gary G. Leisk and David L. Kaplan Abstract Spider silks are characterized by remarkable diversity in their chemistry, structure and functions, ranging from orb web construction to adhesives and cocoons. These unique materials have prompted efforts to explore potential applications of spider silk equivalent to those of silkworm silks, which have undergone 5000 years of domestication and have a variety of uses, from textiles to biomedical materials. Recent progress in genetic engineering of spider silks and the development of new chimeric spider silks with enhanced functions and specific characteristics have advanced spider silk technologies. Further progress in yields of expressed spider-silk proteins, in the control of self-assembly processes and in the selective exploration of material applications is anticipated in the future. The unique features of spider silks, the progress and challenges in the cloning and expression of these silks, environmentally triggered silk assembly and disassembly and the formation of fibers, films and novel chimeric composite materials from genetically engineered spider silks will be reviewed. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (968 kb) |
| Protein Secondary Structure and Orientation in Silk as Revealed by Raman Spectromicroscopy Biophysical Journal, Volume 92, Issue 8, 15 April 2007, Pages 2885-2895 Thierry Lefèvre, Marie-Eve Rousseau and Michel Pézolet Abstract Taking advantage of recent advances in polarized Raman microspectroscopy, and based on a rational decomposition of the amide I band, the conformation and orientation of proteins have been determined for cocoon silks of the silkworms and and dragline silks of the spiders and . This study distinguished between band components due to -sheets, -turns, 3-helices, and unordered structure for the four fibers. For , the -sheet content is 50%, which matches the proportion of residues that form the GAGAGS fibroin motifs. For the dragline and cocoon, the -sheet content (36–37% and 45%, respectively) is higher than the proportion of residues that belong to polyalanine blocks (18% and 42%, respectively), showing that adjacent GGA motifs are incorporated into the -sheets. spidroins contain fewer -sheets and more flexible secondary structures than silkworm fibroins. The amorphous polypeptide chains are preferentially aligned parallel to the fiber direction, although their level of orientation is much lower than that of -sheets. Overall, the results show that the four silks exhibit a common molecular organization, with mixtures of different amounts of -sheets and flexible structures, which are organized with specific orientation levels. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (365 kb) |
Copyright © 1996 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 71, Issue 6, 3442-3447, 1 December 1996
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79539-5
Research Article
D.H. Hijirida, K.G. Do, C. Michal, S. Wong, D. Zax and L.W. Jelinski
Center for Advanced Technology in Biotechnology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
The major ampullate glands of the spider Nephila clavipes contain approximately 0.2 microliter each of a highly concentrated (approximately 50%) solution of silk fibroin. Therefore, the reservoir of silk in these glands presents an ideal opportunity to observe prefolded conformations of a protein in its native state. To this end, the structure and conformation of major ampullate gland silk fibroin within the glands of the spider N. clavipes were examined by 13C NMR spectroscopy. These results were compared to those from silk protein first drawn from the spinneret and then denatured. The 13C NMR chemical shifts, along with infrared and circular dichroism data, suggest that the silk fibroin in the glands exists in dynamically averaged helical conformations. Furthermore, there is no evidence of proline residues in U-(13)C-D-glucose-labeled silk. This transient prefolded "molten fibril" state may correspond to the silk I form found in Bombyx mori silk. There is no evidence of the final beta-sheet structure in the ampullate gland silk fibroin before final silk processing. However, the conformation of silk in the glands appears to be in a highly metastable state, as plasticization with water produces the beta-sheet structure. Therefore, the ducts connecting the ampullate glands to the spinnerets play a larger role in silk processing than previously thought.