» Articles » PMID: 36505976

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

Overview
Journal Adv Funct Mater
Date 2022 Dec 12
PMID 36505976
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

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.

Citing Articles

Charting the envelope of mechanical properties of synthetic silk fibers through predictive modeling of the drawing process.

Graham J, Subramani S, Yang X, Russell T, Zhang F, Keten S Sci Adv. 2025; 11(10):eadr3833.

PMID: 40053589 PMC: 11887809. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adr3833.


Post-spin Stretch Improves Mechanical Properties, Reduces Necking, and Reverts Effects of Aging in Biomimetic Artificial Spider Silk Fibers.

Greco G, Schmuck B, Backlund F, Reiter G, Rising A ACS Appl Polym Mater. 2024; 6(23):14342-14350.

PMID: 39697840 PMC: 11650584. DOI: 10.1021/acsapm.4c02192.


Progress in Multiscale Modeling of Silk Materials.

Brough H, Cheneler D, Hardy J Biomacromolecules. 2024; 25(11):6987-7014.

PMID: 39438248 PMC: 11558682. DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.4c01122.


Effects of Mini-Spidroin Repeat Region on the Mechanical Properties of Artificial Spider Silk Fibers.

Schmuck B, Greco G, Shilkova O, Rising A ACS Omega. 2024; 9(41):42423-42432.

PMID: 39431068 PMC: 11483375. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.4c06031.


Tuneable Recombinant Spider Silk Protein Hydrogels for Drug Release and 3D Cell Culture.

Arndt T, Chatterjee U, Shilkova O, Francis J, Lundkvist J, Johansson D Adv Funct Mater. 2024; 34(35):2303622.

PMID: 39355087 PMC: 11440629. DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202303622.


References
1.
van Beek J, Hess S, Vollrath F, Meier B . The molecular structure of spider dragline silk: folding and orientation of the protein backbone. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002; 99(16):10266-71. PMC: 124902. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.152162299. View

2.
Venyaminov SYu , Kalnin N . Quantitative IR spectrophotometry of peptide compounds in water (H2O) solutions. II. Amide absorption bands of polypeptides and fibrous proteins in alpha-, beta-, and random coil conformations. Biopolymers. 1990; 30(13-14):1259-71. DOI: 10.1002/bip.360301310. View

3.
Bell A, Peakall D . Changes in fine structure during silk protein production in the ampullate gland of the spider Araneus sericatus. J Cell Biol. 1969; 42(1):284-95. PMC: 2107560. DOI: 10.1083/jcb.42.1.284. View

4.
Carissimi G, Baronio C, Montalban M, Villora G, Barth A . On the Secondary Structure of Silk Fibroin Nanoparticles Obtained Using Ionic Liquids: An Infrared Spectroscopy Study. Polymers (Basel). 2020; 12(6). PMC: 7361871. DOI: 10.3390/polym12061294. View

5.
Gonska N, Lopez P, Lozano-Picazo P, Thorpe M, Guinea G, Johansson J . Structure-Function Relationship of Artificial Spider Silk Fibers Produced by Straining Flow Spinning. Biomacromolecules. 2020; 21(6):2116-2124. DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.0c00100. View