Self-Assembly of Natural Silk Fibroin under Osmotic Stress

ORAL

Abstract

Osmotic stress method was applied to investigate the supramolecular self-assembly behavior of natural silk fibroin within the gland. As with the experiments on re-generated silk fibroin, poly(ethylene glycol) 8K was used to apply an osmotic stress of 0.2-7.6 MPa to the gland of Bombyx mori silkworm, in vitro. Fibroin samples were extracted from the fibroin-dominant, water-soluble posterior region, and from three different parts in the middle region of the gland. Calcium chloride of 0.01 M was added to each stressing solution to balance the physiological salt content of the sample. Microscopic and thermodynamic details of this self-assembly process along the spinline have been assessed by wide angle X- ray diffraction, optical microscopy, etc. It is apparent that as osmotic stress increases, isotropic silk fibroin molecules in the posterior region are assembled together to form a water-soluble crystalline mesophase known as silk-I. Further increases in osmotic stress induce an anti- parallel beta-sheet structure known as silk-II.

Authors

  • Sungkyun Sohn

    • Polymer Science and Engineering, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Tamako Hata

    • National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, Japan
  • Helmut H. Strey

  • Samuel Gido

    • Dept. of Polymer Sci. and Eng., Univ. of Mass., Amherst, MA 01003
    • Dep. of Polymer Science and Eng., Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst
    • Univ. of Massachussetts, Amherst
    • Polymer Science and Engineering, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst
    • Department of Polymer Science and Engineering, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003