-Advertisement-
  About AE   About NHM   Contact Us   Terms of Use   Copyright Info   Privacy Policy   Advertising Policies   Site Map
   
Custom Search of AE Site
spacer spacer

BIOENGINEERED SPIDER SILK

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence


Photo: Smithsonian

AMHERST, Mass.(1/6/96)- Scientists have long envied the strength and elasticity of spider's silk, but have been unable to synthesize it. Now researchers at the University of Massachusetts report progress in creating spider's silk using genetic engineering techniques.

Dragline silk is the fiber from which spiders make the scaffolding of their webs. It has been estimated by scientists to be at least five times as strong as steel, twice as elastic as nylon, waterproof and stretchable.

"Dragline spider silk is actually stronger than Kevlar synthetic fiber- and Kevlar is several times stronger than steel," says polymer scientist David Tirrell who wrote a review for the journal Science describing the current research of several groups around the country trying to replicate the properties of spider silk. Tirrell is well-known for his research in "bioengineered materials," a new area of polymer research involving the creation of synthetic proteins to make materials with advanced properties.

"The properties of spider silk have impressed naturalists for thousands of years," says Tirrell, "but until recently we couldn't begin to think of making it in the lab. The advent of modern biotechnology has finally given us the tools to study the molecular design of spider silk fiber, -- and the means for replicating natural spider silk in the lab using established recombinant DNA techniques."

Tirrell reports that the primary constituents of spider silk turn out to be the two simplest amino acids, glycine and alanine, and he notes that researchers at Cornell have recently discovered that the alignment of these amino acids is responsible for spider silk's incredible strength.

"Understanding the alignment of the amino acids in the spider silk will give us insights into ways of duplicating the spider's work," says Tirrell. "We can use techniques commonly employed in recombinant DNA research to synthesize the silk." In designing a bioengineered polymer, Tirrell manipulates the machinery of protein synthesis to his advantage by creating genes that will produce the amino acid sequence yielding the desired product -- in this case dragline silk.

Tirrell and other material scientists are currently using such techniques to create a whole new class of bioengineered materials. Basically, they clone a specific gene and insert it into bacteria such as Escherichia coli. The bacteria then manufacture the desired protein. Spider silk, for instance, could be made in the lab by taking an arachnid's genes and inserting them into bacteria to produce that insect's strong, durable thread. The bacteria reproduce and eventually form a cloned colony that produces the synthetic polymer by way of protein synthesis.

Such synthetic proteins could be tailored to eventually degrade in the human body or they could be made much more resistant to degradation. Such degradation has been the subject of much of Tirrell's work.

"The study of dragline silk offers insights into the behavior of biological materials that will return practical dividends," says Tirrell. "Uncovering the spider's secrets could lead us in exciting new directions for materials research."

"Putting a New Spin on Spider Silk" appeared in the January 5, 1996 issue of Science magazine.


Related information on the Internet

Arachnology Home Page

CNN- Spiders invade Osaka


What's News | About Biotech | Teacher's Lounge | Resource Center | Activities Exchange | Teacher/Scientist Network