Journal
ACS NANO
Volume 8, Issue 7, Pages 7170-7179Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn502149u
Keywords
biopolymer; nanoconfinement; beta-sheets; biomimetic; modular proteins; silks; squid; suckerin
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Funding
- Singapore Ministry of Education [MOE 2011-T2-2-044]
- Singapore National Research Foundation (NRF) through a NRF Fellowship
- Biomedical Research Council (BMRC) of the Agency for Science, Technology, and Research (A*STAR) of Singapore
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The predatory efficiency of squid and cuttlefish (superorder Decapodiformes) is enhanced by robust Sucker Ring Teeth (SRT) that perform grappling functions during prey capture. Here, we show that SRT are composed entirely of related structural suckerin proteins whose modular designs enable the formation of nanoconfined beta-sheet-reinforced polymer networks. Thirty-seven previously undiscovered suckerins were identified from transcriptomes assembled from three distantly related decapodiform cephalopods. Similarity in modular sequence design and exon-intron architecture suggests that suckerins are encoded by a multigene family. Phylogenetic analysis supports this view, revealing that suckerin genes originated in a common ancestor similar to 350 MYa and indicating that nanoconfined beta-sheet reinforcement is an ancient strategy to create robust bulk biomaterials. X-ray diffraction, nanomechanical, and micro-Raman spectroscopy measurements confirm that the modular design of the suckerins facilitates the formation of beta-sheets of precise nanoscale dimensions and enables their assembly into structurally robust supramolecular networks stabilized by cooperative hydrogen bonding. The suckerin gene family has likely played a key role in the evolutionary success of decapodiform cephalopods and provides a large molecular toolbox for biomimetic materials engineering.
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