Literature DB >> 28191922

Synergistic Integration of Experimental and Simulation Approaches for the de Novo Design of Silk-Based Materials.

Wenwen Huang1, Davoud Ebrahimi2, Nina Dinjaski1, Anna Tarakanova2, Markus J Buehler2, Joyce Y Wong3, David L Kaplan1.   

Abstract

Tailored biomaterials with tunable functional properties are crucial for a variety of task-specific applications ranging from healthcare to sustainable, novel bio-nanodevices. To generate polymeric materials with predictive functional outcomes, exploiting designs from nature while morphing them toward non-natural systems offers an important strategy. Silks are Nature's building blocks and are produced by arthropods for a variety of uses that are essential for their survival. Due to the genetic control of encoded protein sequence, mechanical properties, biocompatibility, and biodegradability, silk proteins have been selected as prototype models to emulate for the tunable designs of biomaterial systems. The bottom up strategy of material design opens important opportunities to create predictive functional outcomes, following the exquisite polymeric templates inspired by silks. Recombinant DNA technology provides a systematic approach to recapitulate, vary, and evaluate the core structure peptide motifs in silks and then biosynthesize silk-based polymers by design. Post-biosynthesis processing allows for another dimension of material design by controlled or assisted assembly. Multiscale modeling, from the theoretical prospective, provides strategies to explore interactions at different length scales, leading to selective material properties. Synergy among experimental and modeling approaches can provide new and more rapid insights into the most appropriate structure-function relationships to pursue while also furthering our understanding in terms of the range of silk-based systems that can be generated. This approach utilizes nature as a blueprint for initial polymer designs with useful functions (e.g., silk fibers) but also employs modeling-guided experiments to expand the initial polymer designs into new domains of functional materials that do not exist in nature. The overall path to these new functional outcomes is greatly accelerated via the integration of modeling with experiment. In this Account, we summarize recent advances in understanding and functionalization of silk-based protein systems, with a focus on the integration of simulation and experiment for biopolymer design. Spider silk was selected as an exemplary protein to address the fundamental challenges in polymer designs, including specific insights into the role of molecular weight, hydrophobic/hydrophilic partitioning, and shear stress for silk fiber formation. To expand current silk designs toward biointerfaces and stimuli responsive materials, peptide modules from other natural proteins were added to silk designs to introduce new functions, exploiting the modular nature of silk proteins and fibrous proteins in general. The integrated approaches explored suggest that protein folding, silk volume fraction, and protein amino acid sequence changes (e.g., mutations) are critical factors for functional biomaterial designs. In summary, the integrated modeling-experimental approach described in this Account suggests a more rationally directed and more rapid method for the design of polymeric materials. It is expected that this combined use of experimental and computational approaches has a broad applicability not only for silk-based systems, but also for other polymer and composite materials.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28191922      PMCID: PMC9310429          DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00616

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   24.466


  44 in total

Review 1.  Silk fibroin as a vehicle for drug delivery applications.

Authors:  Esther Wenk; Hans P Merkle; Lorenz Meinel
Journal:  J Control Release       Date:  2010-11-06       Impact factor: 9.776

Review 2.  New opportunities for an ancient material.

Authors:  Fiorenzo G Omenetto; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Science       Date:  2010-07-30       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Nanomechanics of silk: the fundamentals of a strong, tough and versatile material.

Authors:  Isabelle Su; Markus J Buehler
Journal:  Nanotechnology       Date:  2016-06-16       Impact factor: 3.874

4.  Integrated Modeling and Experimental Approaches to Control Silica Modification of Design Silk-Based Biomaterials.

Authors:  Nina Dinjaski; Davoud Ebrahimi; Shengjie Ling; Suraj Shah; Markus J Buehler; David L Kaplan
Journal:  ACS Biomater Sci Eng       Date:  2016-08-23

5.  Control of silicification by genetically engineered fusion proteins: silk-silica binding peptides.

Authors:  Shun Zhou; Wenwen Huang; David J Belton; Leo O Simmons; Carole C Perry; Xiaoqin Wang; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Acta Biomater       Date:  2014-11-04       Impact factor: 8.947

6.  High Throughput Screening of Dynamic Silk-Elastin-Like Protein Biomaterials.

Authors:  Qin Wang; Xiaoxia Xia; Wenwen Huang; Yinan Lin; Qiaobing Xu; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Adv Funct Mater       Date:  2014-07-16       Impact factor: 18.808

7.  The adsorption of preferential binding peptides to apatite-based materials.

Authors:  Sharon J Segvich; Hayes C Smith; David H Kohn
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2008-12-18       Impact factor: 12.479

8.  Heat Capacity of Spider Silk-like Block Copolymers.

Authors:  Wenwen Huang; Sreevidhya Krishnaji; Xiao Hu; David Kaplan; Peggy Cebe
Journal:  Macromolecules       Date:  2011-07-12       Impact factor: 5.985

9.  Self-assembly of genetically engineered spider silk block copolymers.

Authors:  Olena S Rabotyagova; Peggy Cebe; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Biomacromolecules       Date:  2009-02-09       Impact factor: 6.988

10.  Sequential origin in the high performance properties of orb spider dragline silk.

Authors:  Todd A Blackledge; José Pérez-Rigueiro; Gustavo R Plaza; Belén Perea; Andrés Navarro; Gustavo V Guinea; Manuel Elices
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2012-10-29       Impact factor: 4.379

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  7 in total

1.  Stimuli-responsive composite biopolymer actuators with selective spatial deformation behavior.

Authors:  Yushu Wang; Wenwen Huang; Yu Wang; Xuan Mu; Shengjie Ling; Haipeng Yu; Wenshuai Chen; Chengchen Guo; Matthew C Watson; Yingjie Yu; Lauren D Black; Meng Li; Fiorenzo G Omenetto; Chunmei Li; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-06-10       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Engineering Natural and Recombinant Silks for Sustainable Biodevices.

Authors:  Xinchen Shen; Haoyuan Shi; Hongda Wei; Boxuan Wu; Qingyuan Xia; Jingjie Yeo; Wenwen Huang
Journal:  Front Chem       Date:  2022-05-05       Impact factor: 5.545

Review 3.  Silkworm silk-based materials and devices generated using bio-nanotechnology.

Authors:  Wenwen Huang; Shengjie Ling; Chunmei Li; Fiorenzo G Omenetto; David L Kaplan
Journal:  Chem Soc Rev       Date:  2018-08-28       Impact factor: 54.564

4.  Predicting Silk Fiber Mechanical Properties through Multiscale Simulation and Protein Design.

Authors:  Nae-Gyune Rim; Erin G Roberts; Davoud Ebrahimi; Nina Dinjaski; Matthew M Jacobsen; Zaira Martín-Moldes; Markus J Buehler; David L Kaplan; Joyce Y Wong
Journal:  ACS Biomater Sci Eng       Date:  2017-07-03

5.  Materials-by-Design: Computation, Synthesis, and Characterization from Atoms to Structures.

Authors:  Jingjie Yeo; Gang Seob Jung; Francisco J Martín-Martínez; Shengjie Ling; Grace X Gu; Zhao Qin; Markus J Buehler
Journal:  Phys Scr       Date:  2018-04-16       Impact factor: 2.487

6.  Gelation Methods to Assemble Fibrous Proteins.

Authors:  Ning Fan; Ke Zheng
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2021

Review 7.  Silk Materials Functionalized via Genetic Engineering for Biomedical Applications.

Authors:  Tomasz Deptuch; Hanna Dams-Kozlowska
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2017-12-12       Impact factor: 3.623

  7 in total

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