Saturday Citations: Eliminating the intermediary in spider silk production; voracious black holes; Osiris-Rex returns!

Saturday Citations: Eliminating the intermediary in spider silk production; voracious black holes; Osiris-Rex returns!

This week, we reported on spider silk synthesis without spiders, and how policymakers are pursuing ⁤a wish-based ‌approach‍ to a‌ global economy under climate change—what⁢ the kids call “manifesting” a green-growth future. Plus, black holes could be hungrier than previously believed.

Spider silk is a protein⁢ fiber with remarkable mechanical properties, including high tensile strength and ductility, toughness ⁢and adhesiveness. Engineers envision uses for spider silk including durable ⁤and more comfortable clothing, new kinds‍ of bulletproof armor and biomedical applications.

Unfortunately, spiders, who only want to produce silk for a narrow ‍corridor of ‍spider-adjacent purposes,​ are standing in the⁣ way ‌of ​radical ⁤advances in materials science. Instead, scientists seek a more compliant source‍ of ​spider silk, a congenial and obedient organism ⁤that would do little other than eat and produce silk.

If your first thought was “golden retrievers,” you’re an original thinker whose work I would hang on the ​refrigerator. A multi-institutional collaborative of researchers in China have‍ instead genetically modified silkworms using CRISPR-Cas9 to produce spider silk; they⁤ are‍ a more ideal silk producer than‍ dogs‍ for a number of important reasons.

To paraphrase 1970s trucker country singer Red Sovine, there’s a hot ⁤load of freight bound for the Utah desert on Sunday, all the way from the 101955‌ Bennu asteroid. The Osiris-Rex spacecraft will deliver somewhere in the ballpark of a half-pound of space rubble via parachute-dropped​ sample capsule.

2023-09-24 05:48:03
Source from ⁣ phys.org

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