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- <text id=93TT1087>
- <title>
- Mar. 08, 1993: Copying What Comes Naturally
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 08, 1993 The Search for the Tower Bomber
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 58
- Copying What Comes Naturally
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Scientists are creating revolutionary new materials by imitating
- the weave and structure of biological designs
- </p>
- <p>By J. MADELEINE NASH/CHICAGO
- </p>
- <p> A cobweb glistening with dew seems as fragile as it is lovely.
- But one day soon, predicts University of Wyoming biologist Randy
- Lewis, man-made analogues of spider silk will be put to an astonishing
- variety of heavy-duty uses, from reinforcing fibers in aircraft
- doors to body-hugging suits for downhill skiers. Over the past
- four years, Lewis has played the attentive host to dozens of
- fist-size spiders called golden orb weavers, housing them in
- Plexiglas condominiums, feeding them a daily diet of flies and,
- every now and then, flipping them on their backs to unravel
- yards of gossamer thread. The ambitious goal of all this effort:
- to unravel the secrets of spider silk, a family of materials
- stronger than steel, stretchier than nylon and tougher than
- Kevlar, the stuff used to make bulletproof vests.
- </p>
- <p> What gives spider silk its impressive array of qualities? What,
- for that matter, lends crack resistance to horses' hooves and
- adhesiveness to the secretions of mussels and barnacles? What
- makes rats' teeth sharp and insect cuticle hard? By answering
- such questions, Lewis and other researchers hope to usher in
- an exciting new era in materials science, one based not on petroleum
- products like nylon and plastic but on proteins synthesized
- by living, growing things. "Why go to an organic chemist for
- new materials," asks University of Mississippi biochemist Steven
- Case, "when nature has already produced some beauties?"
- </p>
- <p> Fine-tuned by 4 billion years of evolution, protein chemistry
- has a lot to recommend it. To produce Kevlar, for instance,
- requires vats of concentrated sulfuric acid that must be maintained
- at high pressure. But spiders produce silk in the open air using
- water as a solvent. "I am absolutely fascinated," says University
- of Washington materials scientist Christopher Viney, "that such
- an incredible material starts out as a solution in water, and
- all the spider does is squirt it out through a small hole. In
- the process, proteins that were soluble turn into insoluble
- fibers. Now, isn't that amazing?" Just as amazing is Viney's
- discovery that spider silk in its soluble phase forms a liquid
- crystal rather like the displays on digital wristwatches.
- </p>
- <p> Biological wizardry of a different sort is responsible for the
- ruggedness of abalone shells, which under high-powered microscopes
- resemble elaborately constructed stone walls. In this case,
- crystals of calcium carbonate, siphoned from seawater, serve
- as the stones, while a slurry of protein and complex sugars
- acts as the mortar between them. "The ingredients themselves
- are not at all impressive," marvels Princeton University materials
- scientist Ilhan Aksay. "Yet the shell is as strong as the most
- advanced man-made ceramics." And if a simple stone-and-mortar
- design can turn an intrinsically chalky substance into a tough
- coat of armor, exclaims Aksay, just think of what it might do
- for materials like aluminum oxide and silicon carbide that are
- heat resistant but tend to fracture easily.
- </p>
- <p> Metallurgist Ann Van Orden, for her part, is fascinated by the
- fibrous structure of rhinoceros horn. "What strikes me about
- rhino horn," says Van Orden, "is that it is a natural composite.
- Really, it looks just like the material used to make the wings
- of a Stealth aircraft!" The benefits that might flow from such
- an insight can only be guessed at. Perhaps most intriguing is
- the fact that rhino horn is self-healing: capable of repairing
- the tiny cracks that come from jousting matches with other rhinos.
- "Now imagine a car that could self-heal after a fender bender,"
- grins Van Orden mischievously. "There would definitely be a
- market for something like that."
- </p>
- <p> Of course, no car of the future will be made of rhino horn,
- just as no silk spun by spiders is likely be woven into designer
- clothes. For starters, it would take 500 to 1,000 spiders to
- spin out enough silk for one necktie. "And you probably wouldn't
- want to wear a necktie made of spider silk anyway," laughs zoologist
- John Gosline of the University of British Columbia. Reason:
- when wet, spider silk contracts 50%, a property that, in a necktie
- at least, might prove decidedly unpleasant on damp days. Armed
- with the tools of molecular biology, however, scientists can
- learn how spiders construct their silk and then apply those
- lessons to the design of other fibers. "After all," says Gosline,
- "we do not aim to copy nature directly, but to adapt her designs
- and processes to our own purposes."
- </p>
- <p> An inkling of what the future may hold comes from Protein Polymer
- Technologies, a small San Diego firm that is attempting to transform
- this notion of biomimicry into commercial technology. The company's
- first product, intended for use in medical research, is a hybrid
- composed of silkworm protein and fibronectin, a blood protein
- that promotes cell adhesion. When painted onto plastic sheets,
- the hybrid provides a high-quality medium for growing cells
- in the lab. Soon the company hopes to add to its product line
- other protein-based coatings, including ones that give cheap
- polyester the luxurious feel of silk.
- </p>
- <p> Biomimetic materials hold particular promise as coatings and
- wrappings that increase the body's tolerance of implanted devices.
- Eventually these substances may be put to work as nearly natural
- replacements for injured ligaments and arteries. University
- of Alabama molecular biophysicist Dan Urry, for example, has
- succeeded in turning a key segment of the protein elastin, present
- in many body tissues, into a material whose expansive and contractile
- properties closely approximate those of arterial walls. The
- material can be fashioned into tubes that feel, uncannily, like
- real blood vessels and also into sheets for encasing mechanical
- devices like pacemakers. Tests of this new material in animals
- are already under way. At the University of Utah, for example,
- veterinary surgeons are preparing to wrap sheets of synthetic
- elastin around the artificial hearts they plan to implant into
- calves.
- </p>
- <p> Producing elastin through chemical synthesis is a tedious process
- consuming the better part of three months. But eventually, colonies
- of genetically engineered bacteria will be harnessed as factories
- to churn out protein building blocks for all sorts of weird
- and wonderful materials. Right now, in fact, molecular biologists
- are struggling to create lines of bacteria capable of producing
- "dragline" silk--the sturdy strands that orb weavers use as
- struts to frame their webs. Dragline proteins actually contain
- alternating stiff and soft regions, says the University of Wyoming's
- Lewis, "sort of like a series of Lego blocks with Slinkys in
- between." By tinkering with the spider's genes, Lewis believes,
- it may be possible to alter the ratio of Legos to Slinkys, creating
- a line of designer silks customized for different uses.
- </p>
- <p> Like what, for instance? Well, spiderlike silk might be turned
- into a dandy rip-resistant parachute. It might also be fashioned
- into high-strength cable for temporary suspension bridges. "Anything
- that is light and strong and flexible is potentially of interest
- to us," observes David Kaplan, a materials expert at the U.S.
- Army's research center in Natick, Massachusetts. Kaplan is also
- intrigued by resilin, a springy protein found in cockroach cuticle.
- Unlike synthetic rubber, Kaplan notes, resilin does not swell
- on contact with organic solvents. Gloves that incorporate this
- quality would certainly come as a boon to soldiers who have
- to handle large quantities of gasoline and other fuels.
- </p>
- <p> To date, it must be acknowledged, biomimicry remains long on
- promise and short on accomplishment. "Hype," erupts Pennsylvania
- State University materials scientist Rustum Roy. "The whole
- damn thing is hype! What does your mother use when she needs
- a hip replacement? Titanium. Technology has helped out biology
- far more often than the other way around." But Paul Calvert,
- a materials scientist at the University of Arizona, believes
- that the tide is beginning to be reversed. Man-made ceramics,
- Calvert notes, are notoriously brittle and prone to cracking,
- whereas biological ceramics like teeth are not. Calvert is trying
- to duplicate in titanium oxide the crisscross molecular structure
- that gives a rat's tooth its toughness and durability. Whether
- or not he succeeds seems almost beside the point. Already, designs
- from nature's sketch pad have enlarged the range of useful materials
- and enriched the imagination of those working to improve them.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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