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Biotech Science Technology

Spider Silk Finally Ready For Commercialization 48

An anonymous reader writes: We've been hearing about little bits of progress for decades, but spider silk fibers are finally ready to be delivered at commercial scale, thanks to three scientist-founders and large investments ($40M) from SF and SV venture capitalists. Who'll be the first to build a web slinger?
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Spider Silk Finally Ready For Commercialization

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  • by Punko ( 784684 ) on Thursday June 04, 2015 @02:28PM (#49841535)
    These folks have come up with an idea to market a threat with some (but not all) the properties of spider silk. Using yeast. While I am more than willing to admit that this material sounds interesting, it is most certainly not spider silk.

    But it's not the first time we've seen an utterly misleading headline in both the article and in the Slashdot post.
    • These folks have come up with an idea to market a threat with some (but not all) the properties of spider silk. Using yeast. While I am more than willing to admit that this material sounds interesting, it is most certainly not spider silk. But it's not the first time we've seen an utterly misleading headline in both the article and in the Slashdot post.

      TFA [bloomberg.com] states "The company has developed a synthetic alternative to spider silk by engineering proteins identical to the natural threads stretched across the nooks in your basement."

      Care to list the properties that the natural silk has that the synthetic silk doesn't?

      • by random coward ( 527722 ) on Thursday June 04, 2015 @02:59PM (#49841855)
        Structure; Natural silk owes most of its properties to the structure the proteins are woven into at nano-scale. They've synthesized the proteins in the lab before, but that is a long way from synthesizing the silk.
        • Actually modifying the genes of female sheep causes the females to make the proteins in their udders. Milking the goats and separating the proteins allows them to be made into spider silk. We may be seeing some great fishing line and shoe laces might be pretty darned strong soon.
      • Care to list the properties that the natural silk has that the synthetic silk doesn't?

        That "New Spider" smell?

      • by Punko ( 784684 )
        1) The yeast can make the same proteins. However, what makes spider silk's properties so amazing is what the spider does with them inside/with its spinnerets. simply making the building blocks of the silk does not give you spider silk. The chemical work has been done before in a lab.

        2. My comment was that this material was made to be aritificial spider silk. Both the article and the summary headline read "spider silk". Even if this material was 100% exactly the same as natural silk,it would not be s
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday June 04, 2015 @02:28PM (#49841537)

    Spider Man, Spider Man.

    Discovers silk can't hold a grown Man.

    Look out! There falls the Spider Man!

    • by tmosley ( 996283 )
      The original Spider Man didn't shoot silk but some artificial polymer that he created. Guess Stan Lee was an early adopter of calculators.
    • Spider silk in equivalent quantities has tensile strenght above mild steel and it's tougher than kelvlar. (yes toughness is actually a real quantiative metric if a bad choice of words).

  • Raising 40m is fine and all, but something tells me I'm not gonna be able to purchase a spool of this stuff in 2016 like the article boasts. That's just something you say to get media coverage and further investors.
  • by tlambert ( 566799 ) on Thursday June 04, 2015 @04:44PM (#49843011)

    Who else thought this would be about foreign spiders getting H1-B's, and taking jobs from American spiders?

  • Already Achieved (Score:4, Informative)

    by impossiblefork ( 978205 ) on Thursday June 04, 2015 @04:53PM (#49843085)
    To my knowledge this has already been achieved. Specifically, a Japanese company called Spiber spin synthetic spider silk manufactured by this kind of process. They've made enough to weave a dress out of it as a demonstration and have some kind of project to build a factory, which should produce some hundred kilograms per year of it sometime during 2015. However, their website isn't full of updates and much of the material is in Japanese.

    There's also a Swedish biomedicine company called Spiber Technologies that makes this kind of stuff to grow cells on. Reading wikipedia also gives a couple of examples [wikipedia.org]

    Still, if they achieve really large scale production that may be nice even if they aren't first. The focus on textile applications might also be indicative of being able to make large amounts of fiber.
  • For spider silk has been displaced as the worlds strongest material by limpet teeth: http://www.iflscience.com/plan... [iflscience.com]

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