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The critical role of water in spider silk and its consequence for protein mechanics
Author(s) -
Cameron Brown,
Jennifer MacLeod,
Heinz Amenitsch,
Fernando CachoNerin,
H.S. Gill,
Andrew Price,
Enrico Traversa,
Silvia Licoccia,
Federico Rosei
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
nanoscale
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.038
H-Index - 224
eISSN - 2040-3372
pISSN - 2040-3364
DOI - 10.1039/c1nr10502g
Subject(s) - silk , spider silk , toughness , spider , materials science , stiffness , core (optical fiber) , composite material , polymer science , chemical physics , chemistry , physics , astronomy
Due to its remarkable mechanical and biological properties, there is considerable interest in understanding, and replicating, spider silk's stress-processing mechanisms and structure-function relationships. Here, we investigate the role of water in the nanoscale mechanics of the different regions in the spider silk fibre, and their relative contributions to stress processing. We propose that the inner core region, rich in spidroin II, retains water due to its inherent disorder, thereby providing a mechanism to dissipate energy as it breaks a sacrificial amide-water bond and gains order under strain, forming a stronger amide-amide bond. The spidroin I-rich outer core is more ordered under ambient conditions and is inherently stiffer and stronger, yet does not on its own provide high toughness. The markedly different interactions of the two proteins with water, and their distribution across the fibre, produce a stiffness differential and provide a balance between stiffness, strength and toughness under ambient conditions. Under wet conditions, this balance is destroyed as the stiff outer core material reverts to the behaviour of the inner core.

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