Publications by authors named "Yongji Xiong"

Spidroin, with robust mechanical performance and good biocompatibility, could fulfill broad applications in material science and biomedical fields. Development of miniature spidroin has made abundant fiber production economically feasible, but the mechanical properties of artificial silk still fall short of natural silk. The mechanism behind mechanical properties of spidroin usually focuses on β-microcrystalline regions; the effect of amorphous regions was barely studied.

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Intelligent wound management has important potential for promoting the recovery of chronic wounds caused by diabetes. Here, inspired by the field of kirigami, smart patterned high-stretch microneedle dressings (KPMDs) based on gene-modified spider silk proteins were developed to achieve sensitive biochemical and physiological sensing. The spider silk protein (spidroin) has excellent tensile properties, ductility, toughness and biocompatibility.

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Spider silk is a natural fiber known as "biosteel" with the strongest composite performance, such as high tensile strength and toughness. It is also equipped with excellent biocompatibility and shape memory ability, thus shows great potential in many fields such as biomedicine and tissue engineering. Spider silk is composed of macromolecular spidroin with rich structural diversity.

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