Posted on 08/27/2003 11:44:51 AM PDT by presidio9
Scientists say they may have worked out how spiders and silkworms are able to produce such strong fibers to spin their webs and cocoons.
They say that if they are right, their research could be used to produce silk in the laboratory for extra-strong protective clothing, sports equipment and even replacement bone tissue.
Silk is the strongest natural fiber known to man but scientists have yet to replicate its strength. They have managed to purify silk into powder but have not been able to turn it into material.
"The problem is that when people take these purified powders and try to make useful materials, they fall well short," said David Kaplan, professor of biomedical engineering at Tufts University in Massachusetts.
Kaplan and his team say the secret to silk production lies in how spiders and silkworms control silk protein solubility in their glands.
"The entire process is controlled by the amount of water, which is so simple," he told Reuters.
"The organism dumps protein into the gland but as it does that, it regulates how much water it leaves in there. That controls the entire process."
He said the research, published in this week's edition of science journal Nature, could have far-reaching applications, particularly in medicine.
Bioengineers at Tufts have already developed a strategy for using silk to repair damaged knee ligaments and say it could also be used to make artificial bone tissue.
Kaplan said some companies had expressed an interest in using silk to make ultra-strong clothing, hiking gear and outdoor equipment.
,,, so there's a limit to what they can say with their mouth full [of silk]?
nully likes!
Yeah, right.
This is the same school that let out (unaccounted for inventory of live specimens?) all of its imported tent
caterpillars (aka Gypsy Moths) when deemed unsuitable for silk.
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Note: this topic is from 2003. |
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