Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Elastomeric Proteins
- 1 Functions of Elastomeric Proteins in Animals
- 2 Elastic Proteins: Biological Roles and Mechanical Properties
- 3 Elastin as a Self-Assembling Biomaterial
- 4 Ideal Protein Elasticity: The Elastin Models
- 5 Fibrillin: From Microfibril Assembly to Biomechanical Function
- 6 Spinning an Elastic Ribbon of Spider Silk
- 7 Sequences, Structures, and Properties of Spider Silks
- 8 The Nature of Some Spiders' Silks
- 9 Collagen: Hierarchical Structure and Viscoelastic Properties of Tendon
- 10 Collagens with Elastin- and Silk-like Domains
- 11 Conformational Compliance of Spectrins in Membrane Deformation, Morphogenesis, and Signalling
- 12 Giant Protein Titin: Structural and Functional Aspects
- 13 Structure and Function of Resilin
- 14 Gluten, the Elastomeric Protein of Wheat Seeds
- 15 Biological Liquid Crystal Elastomers
- 16 Restraining Cross-Links in Elastomeric Proteins
- 17 Comparative Structures and Properties of Elastic Proteins
- 18 Mechanical Applications of Elastomeric Proteins – A Biomimetic Approach
- 19 Biomimetics of Elastomeric Proteins in Medicine
- Index
18 - Mechanical Applications of Elastomeric Proteins – A Biomimetic Approach
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Elastomeric Proteins
- 1 Functions of Elastomeric Proteins in Animals
- 2 Elastic Proteins: Biological Roles and Mechanical Properties
- 3 Elastin as a Self-Assembling Biomaterial
- 4 Ideal Protein Elasticity: The Elastin Models
- 5 Fibrillin: From Microfibril Assembly to Biomechanical Function
- 6 Spinning an Elastic Ribbon of Spider Silk
- 7 Sequences, Structures, and Properties of Spider Silks
- 8 The Nature of Some Spiders' Silks
- 9 Collagen: Hierarchical Structure and Viscoelastic Properties of Tendon
- 10 Collagens with Elastin- and Silk-like Domains
- 11 Conformational Compliance of Spectrins in Membrane Deformation, Morphogenesis, and Signalling
- 12 Giant Protein Titin: Structural and Functional Aspects
- 13 Structure and Function of Resilin
- 14 Gluten, the Elastomeric Protein of Wheat Seeds
- 15 Biological Liquid Crystal Elastomers
- 16 Restraining Cross-Links in Elastomeric Proteins
- 17 Comparative Structures and Properties of Elastic Proteins
- 18 Mechanical Applications of Elastomeric Proteins – A Biomimetic Approach
- 19 Biomimetics of Elastomeric Proteins in Medicine
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The range of application of any science is restricted as much by commerce as by the inherent possibilities of the science and the resulting technology. This is especially true of areas where the immediate profitability is high: typically medicine, sport, and defence. In these areas, the profit motive disappears beneath hopes of survival, on which there is no rational price. Biologically, this is understandable; intellectually, it can be restricting. Equally restricting is the perception of commerce that an improvement of less than 10% is not worth chasing.
Therefore, when trying to see what applications might be suggested by a biomimetic approach to the mechanical properties of proteins, applications in medicine, sport, and defence are the first to be tried. Medicine is seen to be (relatively!) intellectually easy, since the typical working environment will be similar to that in which the protein evolved – temperatures ranging between –20° and +40°C and an aqueous environment. A few proteins (silk and keratin are the obvious examples; collagen as tendon and processed animal skin should be included) are mechanically interesting in the absence of liquid water, and could therefore be considered as paradigms for applications in sport and defence. But elastomeric proteins – such as elastin, titin, and resilin – rely on water not only as a plasticiser, keeping the protein below its glass transition at ambient conditions, but also to allow expression of the hydrophobicity which lies at the heart of the mechanism of long-range (‘rubbery’) elasticity.
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- Elastomeric ProteinsStructures, Biomechanical Properties, and Biological Roles, pp. 352 - 365Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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