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Worm slime could inspire recyclable polymer design
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加拿大和新加坡的研究人员发现,蠕虫粘液中的成分可能彻底改变高性能聚合物的设计,使其比当前版本更具可持续性。这种粘液由蠕虫头部的特殊乳突产生,遇到水时,坚硬的纤维会恢复成生物分子前体,表明纤维的自组装指令被“编码”在前体中。研究人员通过蛋白质测序和AI算法,在粘液中识别出一种高分子量蛋白质,这种蛋白质在进化上非常古老,在纤维形成中起着结构和机械作用,可以看作是一种“胶水蛋白”。研究团队推测,纤维形成的逆转性基于几种粘液蛋白之间的受体-配体相互作用,这为制造高性能、无毒且可回收的生物聚合物材料提供了灵感。

🐛研究发现,蠕虫粘液中含有可彻底改变高性能聚合物设计的成分,使其更具可持续性。这种粘液由蠕虫头部的特殊乳突产生,遇到水时,坚硬的纤维会恢复成生物分子前体。

🔬研究人员通过蛋白质测序和AI算法,在粘液中识别出一种高分子量蛋白质,被称为富含亮氨酸的重复序列,该蛋白质的结构类似于一种称为Toll样受体的细胞表面受体蛋白。

🧬这种蛋白质在纤维形成中起着结构和机械作用,可以看作是一种“胶水蛋白”。研究人员在近4亿年前从共同祖先分化出来的不同种类的蠕虫中发现了这种相同的蛋白质,表明这种不同的生物学功能在进化上非常古老。

💡研究团队推测,纤维形成的逆转性基于几种粘液蛋白之间的受体-配体相互作用,这为制造高性能、无毒且可回收的生物聚合物材料提供了灵感。

The animal world – including some of its ickiest parts – never ceases to amaze. According to researchers in Canada and Singapore, velvet worm slime contains an ingredient that could revolutionize the design of high-performance polymers, making them far more sustainable than current versions.

“We have been investigating velvet worm slime as a model system for inspiring new adhesives and recyclable plastics because of its ability to reversibly form strong fibres,” explains Matthew Harrington, the McGill University chemist who co-led the research with Ali Miserez of Nanyang Technological University (NTU). “We needed to understand the mechanism that drives this reversible fibre formation, and we discovered a hitherto unknown feature of the proteins in the slime that might provide a very important clue in this context.”

The velvet worm (phylum Onychophora) is a small, caterpillar-like creature that lives in humid forests. Although several organisms, including spiders and mussels, produce protein-based slimy material outside their bodies, the slime of the velvet worm is unique. Produced from specialized papillae on each side of the worm’s head, and squirted out in jets whenever the worm needs to capture prey or defend itself, it quickly transforms from a sticky, viscoelastic gel into stiff, glassy fibres as strong as nylon.

When dissolved in water, these stiff fibres return to their biomolecular precursors. Remarkably, new fibres can then be drawn from the solution – implyimg that the instructions for fibre self-assembly are “encoded” within the precursors themselves, Harrington says.

High-molecular-weight protein identified

Previously, the molecular mechanisms behind this reversibility were little understood. In the present study, however, the researchers used protein sequencing and the AI-guided protein structure prediction algorithm AlphaFold to identify a specific high-molecular-weight protein in the slime. Known as a leucine-rich repeat, this protein has a structure similar to that of a cell surface receptor protein called a Toll-like receptor (TLR).

In biology, Miserez explains, this type of receptor is involved in immune system response. It also plays a role in embryonic or neural development. In the worm slime, however, that’s not the case.

“We have now unveiled a very different role for TLR proteins,” says Miserez, who works in NTU’s materials science and engineering department. “They play a structural, mechanical role and can be seen as a kind of ‘glue protein’ at the molecular level that brings together many other slime proteins to form the macroscopic fibres.”

Miserez adds that the team found this same protein in different species of velvet worms that diverged from a common ancestor nearly 400 million years ago. “This means that this different biological function is very ancient from an evolutionary perspective,” he explains.

“It was very unusual to find such a protein in the context of a biological material,” Harrington adds. “By predicting the protein’s structure and its ability to bind to other slime proteins, we were able to hypothesize its important role in the reversible fibre formation behaviour of the slime.”

The team’s hypothesis is that the reversibility of fibre formation is based on receptor-ligand interactions between several slime proteins. While Harrington acknowledges that much work remains to be done to verify this, he notes that such binding is a well-described principle in many groups of organisms, including bacteria, plants and animals. It is also crucial for cell adhesion, development and innate immunity. “If we can confirm this, it could provide inspiration for making high-performance non-toxic (bio)polymeric materials that are also recyclable,” he tells Physics World.

The study, which is detailed in PNAS, was mainly based on computational modelling and protein structure prediction. The next step, say the McGill researchers, is to purify or recombinantly express the proteins of interest and test their interactions in vitro.

The post Worm slime could inspire recyclable polymer design appeared first on Physics World.

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蠕虫粘液 聚合物 可回收材料 蛋白质
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