Artificial hagfish protein fibers with ultra-high and tunable stiffness

Nanoscale ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (35) ◽  
pp. 12908-12915 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Fu ◽  
Paul A. Guerette ◽  
Andrea Pavesi ◽  
Nils Horbelt ◽  
Chwee Teck Lim ◽  
...  

Recombinant hagfish slime proteins are self-assembled into coiled-coil filaments, drawn from a solution, and phase-transformed into elongated β-sheets with high stiffness.

2010 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 829-832
Author(s):  
Nobuyuki Higashi ◽  
Yuichi Gondo ◽  
Takahiro Matsumoto ◽  
Tomoyuki Koga

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Junfeng Hu ◽  
Chengkun Xiao ◽  
Tao Wen

Abstract The jamming mechanism is an important method to tune the stiffness of soft-bodied machines to enable them to adapt to their surroundings. However, it is difficult for the present jamming structures to integrate them into complicated structures such as twist, cylinder, and spiral. This paper introduces a novel jamming mechanism termed a filament jamming technique, which varies stiffness using jamming of a cluster of tiny and compliant filaments. The jamming structure demonstrated a variety of characteristics such as softness, shape compatibility, lightweight, and high stiffness, which these feats can meet to a variety of application scenarios that the traditional jamming one cannot afford. The mechanical behavior of the jamming structure was studied with an experimental test, in which the experimental results illustrated that its structural and material factors affect stiffness variation and dynamic performance. To demonstrate the advantage of the jamming technique, we constructed a soft gripper and a torsional actuator to demonstrate how the mechanics of filament jamming can enhance the performance of real-world robotics systems. Therefore, the filament jamming mechanism provides a variety of machines and structures with additional properties to increase forces transmitted to the environment and to tune response and damping. This study aims to foster a new generation of mechanically versatile machines and structures with both softness and stiffness.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (9) ◽  
pp. 2032-2037 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zirui Zhai ◽  
Yong Wang ◽  
Hanqing Jiang

Origami has been employed to build deployable mechanical metamaterials through folding and unfolding along the crease lines. Deployable metamaterials are usually flexible, particularly along their deploying and collapsing directions, which unfortunately in many cases leads to an unstable deployed state, i.e., small perturbations may collapse the structure along the same deployment path. Here we create an origami-inspired mechanical metamaterial with on-demand deployability and selective collapsibility through energy analysis. This metamaterial has autonomous deployability from the collapsed state and can be selectively collapsed along two different paths, embodying low stiffness for one path and substantially high stiffness for another path. The created mechanical metamaterial yields load-bearing capability in the deployed direction while possessing great deployability and collapsibility. The principle in this work can be utilized to design and create versatile origami-inspired mechanical metamaterials that can find many applications.


ChemPhysChem ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 488-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido W. M. Vandermeulen ◽  
Dariush Hinderberger ◽  
Hui Xu ◽  
Sergei S. Sheiko ◽  
Gunnar Jeschke ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniil V. Zaytsev ◽  
Vasily A. Morozov ◽  
Jiufeng Fan ◽  
Xianchun Zhu ◽  
Madhumita Mukherjee ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2217-2217
Author(s):  
Rustem I. Litvinov ◽  
Dzhigangir A. Faizullin ◽  
Yuriy F. Zuev ◽  
Artyom Zhmurov ◽  
Olga Kononova ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2217 A new field of biomedical research, biomechanics of hemostasis and thrombosis, has been quickly developing over the past few years. The mechanical properties of fibrin are essential in vivo for the ability of clots to stop bleeding in flowing blood but also determine the likelihood of obstructive thrombi that cause heart attack and stroke. Despite such critical importance, the structural basis of clot mechanics is not well understood. The structural changes underlying deformation of fibrin polymer occur at different spatial scales from macroscopic to submolecular, including molecular unfolding, about which relatively little is known. In this work, fibrin mechanics was studied with respect to molecular structural changes during fibrin deformation. The results of atomic force microscopy-induced unfolding of fibrinogen monomers and oligomers were correlated with force-extension curves obtained using Molecular Dynamics simulations. The mechanical unraveling of fibrin(ogen) was shown to be determined by molecular transitions that couple reversible extension-contraction of the α-helical coiled-coil regions with unfolding of the terminal γ-nodules. The coiled-coils act as molecular springs to buffer external mechanical perturbations, transmitting and distributing force as the γ-nodules unfold. Unfolding of the γ-nodules, stabilized by strong inter-domain interactions with the neighboring β-nodules, was characterized by an average force of ∼90 pN and peak-to-peak distance of ∼25 nm. All-atom Molecular Dynamics simulations further showed a transition from α-helix to β-sheet at higher extensions. To reveal the force-induced α-helix to β-sheet transition in fibrin experimentally, we used Fourier Transform infrared spectroscopy of hydrated fibrin clots made from human blood plasma. When extended or compressed, fibrin showed a shift of absorbance intensity mainly in the amide I band but also in the amide II and III bands, demonstrating an increase of the β-sheets and a corresponding reduction of the α-helices. These structural conversions correlated directly with the strain or pressure and were partially reversible at the conditions applied. The spectra characteristic of the nascent inter-chain β-sheets were consistent with protein aggregation and fiber bundling during clot deformation observed using scanning electron microscopy. Additional information on the mechanically induced α-helix to β-sheet transition in fibrin was obtained from computational studies of the forced elongation of the entire fibrin molecule and its α-helical coiled-coil portions. We found that upon force application, the coiled-coils undergo ∼5–50 nm extension and 360-degree unwinding. The force-extension curves for the coiled-coils showed three distinct regimes: the linear elastic regime, the constant-force plastic regime, and the non-linear regime. In the linear regime, the coiled-coils unwind but not unfold. In the plastic regime, the triple α-helical segments rewind and re-unwind while undergoing a non-cooperative phase transition to form parallel β-sheets. We conclude that under extension and/or compression an α-helix to β-sheet conversion of the coiled-coils occurs in the fibrin clot as a part of forced protein unfolding. These regimes of forced elongation of fibrin provide important qualitative and quantitative characteristics of the molecular mechanisms underlying fibrin mechanical properties at the microscopic and macroscopic scales. Furthermore, these structural characteristics of the dynamic mechanical behavior of fibrin at the nanometer scale determine whether or not clots have the strength to stanch bleeding and if thrombi become obstructive or embolize. Finally, this knowledge of the functional significance of different domains of fibrin(ogen) suggests new approaches for modulation of these properties as potential therapeutic interventions. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (23) ◽  
pp. 5070-5077 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiya Fujita ◽  
Kazunori Matsuura

A β-annulus-coiled-coil-B peptide self-assembled into an artificial viral capsid and then the addition of a complementary coiled-coil-A peptide showed the formation of capsids with coiled-coil spikes on the surface.


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