Experimental Methods for Characterizing the Secondary Structure and Thermal Properties of Silk Proteins.

Macromol Rapid Commun

Department of Biomedical Engineering, Tufts University, 4 Colby Street, Medford, MA, 02155, USA.

Published: January 2019

Silk proteins are biopolymers produced by spinning organisms that have been studied extensively for applications in materials engineering, regenerative medicine, and devices due to their high tensile strength and extensibility. This remarkable combination of mechanical properties arises from their unique semi-crystalline secondary structure and block copolymer features. The secondary structure of silks is highly sensitive to processing, and can be manipulated to achieve a wide array of material profiles. Studying the secondary structure of silks is therefore critical to understanding the relationship between structure and function, the strength and stability of silk-based materials, and the natural fiber synthesis process employed by spinning organisms. However, silks present unique challenges to structural characterization due to high-molecular-weight protein chains, repetitive sequences, and heterogeneity in intra- and interchain domain sizes. Here, experimental techniques used to study the secondary structure of silks, the information attainable from these techniques, and the limitations associated with them are reviewed. Ultimately, the appropriate utilization of a suite of techniques discussed here will enable detailed characterization of silk-based materials, from studying fundamental processing-structure-function relationships to developing commercially useful quality control assessments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6425979PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/marc.201800390DOI Listing

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