RESEARCH WATCH

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Prasen Vinchurkar

unread,
Aug 16, 2011, 1:10:29 AM8/16/11
to sosto...@googlegroups.com, vlsi_ja...@googlegroups.com
                                                                                                                           || श्री गणेशाय नाम्माछ ||

Genetically-engineered spider silk could be used in gene therapy

By Ben Coxworth

15:14 August 11, 2011

Scientists are experimenting with using genetically engineered spider silk proteins in the...

Scientists are experimenting with using genetically engineered spider silk proteins in the field of gene therapy (Photo: Vincent de Groot)

Siemens answers: - www.siemens.com/answers
Early detection & prevention: Healthcare IT.
Ads by Google

Spider silk is pretty amazing stuff. Pound for pound, it has a tensile strength close to that of steel while being one-fifth as dense, it's tougher than Kevlar, and it can stretch to almost one-and-a-half times its length without breaking. As if that wasn't enough, it now appears that a genetically engineered version of the substance could be used for delivering genes into human cells.

In the experimental field of gene therapy, therapeutic genes are transported to problematic cells, the genes of which they then alter to perform normally. Viruses are typically used to carry the therapeutic genes within the body, although concerns have been raised regarding the safety of doing so.

Silk proteins, on the other hand, have been used in the field of medicine for decades, and are biocompatible.

A team of scientists led by Tufts University's Prof. David Kaplan has modified spider silk proteins to attach only to diseased cells, and to contain a gene that codes for the protein that causes fireflies to glow. In lab tests on mice containing human breast cancer cells, the silk proteins attached themselves to those cells and injected the glow-producing genes' DNA material into them, without harming the mice. Using special equipment, the researchers were able to detect the glow, which let them know that the proteins had reached their targets.

The research was recently published in the journal Bioconjugate Chemistry.

Human Recombinant Protein - www.Randox-LifeSciences.com
High Quality Antibodies, Proteins Conjugates at Randox Life Sciences
Ads by Google
Share
Tags
Post a Comment

You are logged in as Prasen Vinchurkar

Post a link to this article on your Facebook wall  or



By clicking the "post comment" button, you agree to our terms of use


Related Articles Email this article to a friend

--
Prasen Vinchurkar
Nanoscience & Nanotechnology
School Of interdisciplinary Science & Technology
I2IT, Hinjewadi, Pune
8087024109

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages