By a number of measures, spider silk is one of the toughest materials around. It's also light weight and (obviously) biocompatible. Unfortunately, it's also extremely hard to produce in any sort of usable quantity. Now, researchers have figured out a way that might help us make a lot more of something almost as good: they've engineered some DNA that encodes a hybrid of silkworm and spider proteins, and gotten silkworms to produce it.
We've cloned a number of spider silk proteins now, and managed to express them in everything from bacteria to goats. None of these methods end up making much in the way of protein, however, and the material that is made is difficult to purify and form into fibers. Spiders would seem like an obvious choice for making silk but they create a number of issues that we don't normally associate with manufacturing; as the authors put it, "territorialism and cannibalism preclude spider farming as a viable manufacturing approach."
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