3.8 Article

Self-Assembling Silk-Based Nanofibers with Hierarchical Structures

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 3, Issue 10, Pages 2617-2627

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.7b00442

Keywords

silk fibroin; hydrophilicity; self-assembly; nanofiber; hierarchical

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51373114]
  2. PAPD
  3. College Nature Science Research Project of Jiangsu Province, China [15KJA540001]

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Self-assembling fibrous supramolecular assemblies with sophisticated hierarchical structures at the mesoscale are of interest from both fundamental and applied engineering. In this paper, the relatively hydrophilic domains of silk fibroin (HSF) were extracted and used in studies of self-assembly. The HSF fraction spontaneously self-assembled into nanofibers, 10 to 100 pm long and 50 to 250 nm in diameter, within 2 to 8 h in aqueous conditions. Interestingly, these HSF nanofibers consisted of dozens of nanofibrils arranged in a parallel organization with assembled diameters of similar to 30 nm, similar to the sophisticated hierarchical structure observed in native silk fibers. Dynamic morphology and conformation studies were carried out to determine the mechanisms underlying the HSF self-assembly process at both the nanoscale and mesoscale. The HSF self-assembled into nanofibers in a bottom-to-up manner, from sticky colloid particles to cylindrical globules, to form nanofibrous networks. Because of the enhanced HSF self-assembling kinetics and the hierarchical structure of HSF nanofibers, this hydrophilicity-driven approach provides further insight into silk fibroin (SF) self-assembly in vivo and also offers new tools for the recapitulation of high-performance materials for engineering applications.

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