Publication | Closed Access
Silk Properties Determined by Gland-Specific Expression of a Spider Fibroin Gene Family
407
Citations
11
References
1996
Year
Biomimetic MaterialsGeneticsMolecular BiologyFiber SpinningMolecular GeneticsRepeat MotifsSilk PropertiesMatrix BiologyGland-specific ExpressionFiber Property ControlBiomimetic PolymerMorphogenesisGene ExpressionBiomolecular EngineeringBiofunctional MaterialNatural SciencesGene FamilyProtein EngineeringMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Spiders produce a variety of silks that range from Lycra-like elastic fibers to Kevlar-like superfibers. A gene family from the spider Araneus diadematus was found to encode silk-forming proteins (fibroins) with different proportions of amorphous glycine-rich domains and crystal domains built from poly(alanine) and poly(glycine-alanine) repeat motifs. Spiders produce silks of different composition by gland-specific expression of this gene family, which allows for a range of mechanical properties according to the crystal-forming potential of the constituent fibroins. These principles of fiber property control may be important in the development of genetically engineered structural proteins.
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