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Spiders produce a variety of silks, and the cloning of genes for silk fibroins reveals a clear link between protein sequence and structure-property relationships. The fibroins produced in the spider's major ampullate (MA) gland, which forms the dragline and web frame, contain multiple repeats of motifs that include an 8-10 residue long poly-alanine block and a 24-35 residue long glycine-rich block. When fibroins are spun into fibres, the poly-alanine blocks form ()-sheet crystals that crosslink the fibroins into a polymer network with great stiffness, strength and toughness. As illustrated by a comparison of MA silks from Araneus diadematus and Nephila clavipes, variation in fibroin sequence and properties between spider species provides the opportunity to investigate the design of these remarkable biomaterials.
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John M. Gosline
University of British Columbia
Paul A. Guerette
Bolt Threads
Christine Ortlepp
University of British Columbia
Journal of Experimental Biology
University of British Columbia
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Gosline et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1899b1673175fe754aa9c0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.202.23.3295
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