Publication | Closed Access
Iron-Clad Fibers: A Metal-Based Biological Strategy for Hard Flexible Coatings
963
Citations
28
References
2010
Year
Materials ScienceBiofunctional MaterialEngineeringProtein FoldingDense Cross-linkingBiomineralizationGranular CuticlesBiophysical AspectPhysical ChemistryFiber ScienceFiber ChemistrySoft MatterMedicineIron-clad FibersBiophysicsByssus Cuticle Chemistry
The extensible byssal threads of marine mussels are shielded from abrasion in wave-swept habitats by an outer cuticle that is largely proteinaceous and approximately fivefold harder than the thread core. Threads from several species exhibit granular cuticles containing a protein that is rich in the catecholic amino acid 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (dopa) as well as inorganic ions, notably Fe3+. Granular cuticles exhibit a remarkable combination of high hardness and high extensibility. We explored byssus cuticle chemistry by means of in situ resonance Raman spectroscopy and demonstrated that the cuticle is a polymeric scaffold stabilized by catecholato-iron chelate complexes having an unusual clustered distribution. Consistent with byssal cuticle chemistry and mechanics, we present a model in which dense cross-linking in the granules provides hardness, whereas the less cross-linked matrix provides extensibility.
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