Posted on 01/30/2015 11:12:53 AM PST by Olog-hai
Biomaterial experts at Germanys Bayreuth and Würzburg universities claimed a breakthrough in cultivating living cells while holding them in place with liquified spider silk.
The research method mixed spider silk with connective fibroblast cells from mice to generate a so-called bio ink or gel. Fibroblasts typically begin wound repairs.
When extruded from a 3-D printer, the silk molecules quickly wrapped those cells, giving them a porous matrix in which to flourish, the team said.
(Excerpt) Read more at dw.de ...
That’s a awesome break-through! I hope it holds solid promise for the repair of nerve tissue..think spinal damage! Sans mouse parts of course.
Afterwards, the cells were liquefied and consumed.
Serrapeptase comes to mind.
I remember that movie with Jeff Goldblum about this.
breakthrough in cultivating living cells while holding them in place with liquified spider silk... mixed spider silk with connective fibroblast cells from mice... Fibroblasts typically begin wound repairs. When extruded from a 3-D printer, the silk molecules quickly wrapped those cells, giving them a porous matrix in which to flourish, the team said.
DARPA made some spider silk armor...a few square inches for almost $1mm. It would stop .30-06 AP IIRC.
Yay for the Bavarians. Ein prosit!
I know a blues guitarist who had a finger tip cut off. His mother wrapped it back on with a spider web and it held in place. It was crooked but it worked.
http://www.chron.com/entertainment/music/article/Earl-Gilliam-sings-lives-the-blues-1725886.php
Earl Gilliam avoided the hospital for 78 years. Two of his brothers died in hospitals within a 24-hour span, and that was all the reason he needed to stay away. When he says my people live a long time, Gilliam isnt kidding; his mother ticked to 102. She instilled in him a distrust of doctors.
He holds up his trigger finger, a long, brown, spidery digit that has pounded out blues songs on a keyboard for the better part of seven decades. The tip of the finger is positioned at a permanent right angle, the result of a lawn mower accident when he was a kid. My mother didnt believe in doctors, he says. So she reattached the fingertip, splinted it using spider webs as a wrap and soaked it in vinegar. Thats just the way it healed, he says, smiling. Told you, she didnt believe in doctors....
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