Native Silk Fibers:
Protein Sequence and Structure
Influences on Thermal and Mechanical Properties
Posted on 2025-03-07 - 13:45
Silk fibers produced by arthropods have inspired an array
of materials
with applications in healthcare, medical devices, textiles, and sustainability.
Silks exhibit biodiversity with distinct variations in primary protein
constituent sequences (fibroins, spidroins) and structures across
taxonomic classifications, specifically the Lepidopteran and Araneae
orders. Leveraging the biodiversity in arthropod silks offers advantages
due to the diverse mechanical properties and thermal stabilities achievable,
primarily attributed to variations in fiber crystallinity and repeating
amino acid motifs. In this review, we aim to delineate known properties
of silk fibers and correlate them with predicted protein sequences
and secondary structures, informed by newly annotated genomes. We
will discuss established patterns in repeat motifs governing specific
properties and underscore the biological diversity within silk fibroin
and spidroin sequences. Elucidating the relationship between protein
sequences and properties of natural silk fibers will identify strategies
for designing new materials through rational silk-based fiber design.
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Aikman, Elizabeth
L.; Eccles, Lauren E.; Stoppel, Whitney L. (2025). Native Silk Fibers:
Protein Sequence and Structure
Influences on Thermal and Mechanical Properties. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.4c01781Â