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Jerusalem,
Nov. 23, 2004 – For the first time anywhere, scientists
from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and from Germany
have succeeded in producing self-assembled spider
web fibers under laboratory conditions, outside of
the bodies of spiders. This fiber is significantly
stronger than the silk fiber made by silkworms.
The
achievement by the research team, described in an
article in the Nov. 23 issue of Current Biology, opens
the way to commercial development of this spider fiber
for numerous industrial applications.
Silk
has been in use by mankind for thousands of years.
However, unlike silkworms, spiders are territorial
in nature and thus not subject to domestication and
commercial growth in quantities.
Scientists
have attempted to create spider’s webs independently
of the spider itself through genetic engineering by
manufacturing the proteins, which constitute the silk
fibers of the webs, through the use of bacteria, yeast,
plants and mammalian cells in tissue culture. But
these efforts were unsuccessful in producing fibers
with properties similar to the natural ones.
Now,
the Israeli-German scientific team has succeeded,
through techniques of genetic engineering, in creating
spontaneous production of spider web fiber in insect
cell cultures. These fibers were equal in their chemical
resistance characteristics to those produced by the
spider. Mass production of such fiber in the future
can be used industrially in various areas which require
fine applications. The Yissum Research Development
Company of the Hebrew University and German partners
are focusing on commercializing the research.
Participants
in the research, which has been conducted over the
past two years, are the developmental biologist Dr.
Uri Gat, doctoral student Shmulik Ittah and research
assistant Shulamit Cohen of the Department of Cell
and Animal Biology in the Silberman Institute of Life
Sciences at the Hebrew University; Dr. Thomas Scheibel
and doctoral student Daniel Huemmerich, biophysicists
at the Technical University of Munich; and Fritz Vollrath
of Oxford University.
Spider
webs consist of fibers (spider silks) produced by
specific proteins. In order to artificially synthesize
these proteins, the researchers utilized sections
of the genes of the garden spider (Araneus diadematus),
which are involved in the manufacture of these proteins.
The
spider spins its web from various types of fibers,
including the fiber known as dragline silk, which
is characterized by great strength and elasticity.
It is six times stronger than nylon and steel fiber
of equal diameter and serves the spider as a “lifeline”
in case of falling. This fiber is made up primarily
from two proteins, ADF-3 and ADF-4, which are genetically
similar and are produced in a gland in the abdomen
of the spider. The process by which these proteins
pass from the moment of their production until their
excretion as fiber was not understood until now.
In
their laboratory experiments, the researchers introduced
the genes, which encode the two dragline silk proteins,
into an insect-infecting virus, known as baculovirus.
These genetically engineered viruses were then grown
in cultures of cells derived from a type of caterpillar
called the fall armyworm.
“Since
spiders and insects are both arthropods and since
their genomes are more closely related to each other
than to those creatures with which prior experiments
were conducted, we felt that we would be able to produce
spider fibers using these insects,” said Dr. Gat.
“For this purpose, we developed a methodology for
producing great quantities of the appropriate proteins,
which is based on infecting the insect cells with
the genetically engineered virus, in order to produce
the fiber.”
After
the engineered viruses infected the insect cells,
the cells began producing the proteins, and subsequently
“spider” fibers spontaneously formed in them. However,
– unlike in spiders – these laboratory-produced fibers
were made up only of the ADF-4 protein, while the
ADF-3 protein remained dissolved. Nevertheless, these
fibers were identical in their diameter to that of
real spider fiber and were found to be equal to --
and in certain aspects even exceed -- the chemical
resistance quality of the spider-created fiber.
The
scientists believe that that the variability in the
behavior of the proteins they produced as compared
to what occurs in nature shows a high level of sophistication
in the spider fibers. It seems that the protein ADF-4
makes it possible for the rapid production of fiber,
while the other protein, ADF-3, regulates production
and prevents early fiber production, which could be
fatal to the spider.
The
researchers are now hoping to be able to create conditions,
which will make it possible to produce the spider
fibers in quantity without the limitations of having
to do this within insect cells.
“The
research enabled us to determine the close connection
that exists between the sequence, structure and functions
of the proteins,” said Dr. Gat. “From a practical
viewpoint, mass production of fibers, whose diameter
is one-thousandth of a millimeter, is likely to be
useful in the future for manufacture of bulletproof
vests, surgical thread, micro-conductors, optical
fibers and fishing rods; even new types of clothing
may be envisioned.”
For
further information: Jerry Barach, Dept. of Media
Relations, the Hebrew University, tel: 02-588-2904,
or Orit Sulitzeanu, Hebrew University spokesperson,
tel. 052-2608016.
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