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1.
J Exp Biol ; 226(2)2023 01 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36633333

RESUMO

To successfully capture flying insect prey, a spider's orb web must withstand the energy of impact without the silk breaking. In this study, we examined the anchor threads: the silk lines that anchor the main capture area of the web to the surrounding environment. These anchor threads can account for a large portion of the web, yet are usually excluded from experiments and simulations. We compared projectile capture and kinetic energy absorption between webs with and without access to anchor threads. Webs with anchor threads captured significantly more projectiles and absorbed significantly more energy than those with constrained anchors. This is likely because the anchor threads increase web compliance, resulting in webs with the ability to catch high-energy flying insects without breaking. Anchor threads are one example of how different types of web architecture expand the range of possible prey capture strategies by enabling the web to withstand greater impacts.


Assuntos
Aranhas , Animais , Comportamento Predatório , Seda , Cinética
2.
ACS Biomater Sci Eng ; 8(8): 3354-3360, 2022 08 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35894694

RESUMO

Spider aggregate glue can absorb moisture from the atmosphere to reduce its viscosity and become tacky. The viscosity at which glue adhesion is maximized is remarkably similar across spider species, even though that viscosity is achieved at very different relative humidity (RH) values matching their diverse habitats. However, the molecular changes in the protein structure and the bonding state of water (both referred to here as molecular structure) with respect to the changes in RH are not known. We use attenuated total reflectance-infrared (ATR-IR) spectroscopy to probe the changes in the molecular structure of glue as a function of RH for three spider species from different habitats. We find that the glue retains bound water at lower RH and absorbs liquid-like water at higher RH. The absorption of liquid-like water at high RH plasticizes the glue and explains the decrease in glue viscosity. The changes to protein conformations as a function RH are either subtle or not detectable by IR spectroscopy. Importantly, the molecular changes are reversible over multiple cycles of RH change. Further, separation of glue constituents results in a different humidity response as compared to pristine glue, supporting the standing hypothesis that the glue constituents have a synergistic association that makes spider glue a functional adhesive. The results presented in this study provide further insights into the mechanism of the humidity-responsive adhesion of spider glue.


Assuntos
Aranhas , Adesivos/química , Adesivos/metabolismo , Animais , Umidade , Aranhas/química , Aranhas/metabolismo , Viscosidade , Água/metabolismo
3.
Naturwissenschaften ; 108(6): 60, 2021 Nov 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34748107

RESUMO

Entanglements are common in both natural and artificial systems and can result in both beneficial and harmful effects. Most spider webs are static structures held under constant tension and do not tangle. However, many spiders actively load tension into their webs by coiling silk threads that are released to "fire" webs at prey. Here we test whether or not tangling occurs during the rapid release of webs built by the triangle spider Hyptiotes cavatus. We use high-speed videography to examine the release of the spider's web, looking for signs of tangling both visually on the videos and on acceleration graphs. The spider tenses the web by pulling on a silken anchor line using a leg-over-leg movement, deforming the silk into permanent coils and storing excess slack in a loose bundle between the spider's legs. This 1-3cm long bundle of coils straightens during the web's release in as few as 4ms. Though the messy silk coils are pressed closely together, the web's release is never impeded by catastrophic tangling. This lack of serious tangling is perhaps due to the permanent coils preventing random movement of the silk. The coils also compact the loose silk, preventing interference with the spider's movement. The ability to coil its anchor line allows H. cavatus to permanently restructure its silk, facilitating its active web-hunting behavior. Our findings broaden our knowledge of silk manipulation by spiders and may give insights into creating tangle-free systems through structural changes.


Assuntos
Seda , Aranhas , Animais , Comportamento Predatório
4.
J R Soc Interface ; 18(179): 20210320, 2021 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34129788

RESUMO

The spider major ampullate (MA) silk exhibits high tensile strength and extensibility and is typically a blend of MaSp1 and MaSp2 proteins with the latter comprising glycine-proline-glycine-glycine-X repeating motifs that promote extensibility and supercontraction. The MA silk from Darwin's bark spider (Caerostris darwini) is estimated to be two to three times tougher than the MA silk from other spider species. Previous research suggests that a unique MaSp4 protein incorporates proline into a novel glycine-proline-glycine-proline motif and may explain C. darwini MA silk's extraordinary toughness. However, no direct correlation has been made between the silk's molecular structure and its mechanical properties for C. darwini. Here, we correlate the relative protein secondary structure composition of MA silk from C. darwini and four other spider species with mechanical properties before and after supercontraction to understand the effect of the additional MaSp4 protein. Our results demonstrate that C. darwini MA silk possesses a unique protein composition with a lower ratio of helices (31%) and ß-sheets (20%) than other species. Before supercontraction, toughness, modulus and tensile strength correlate with percentages of ß-sheets, unordered or random coiled regions and ß-turns. However, after supercontraction, only modulus and strain at break correlate with percentages of ß-sheets and ß-turns. Our study highlights that additional information including crystal size and crystal and chain orientation is necessary to build a complete structure-property correlation model.


Assuntos
Seda , Aranhas , Animais , Casca de Planta , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Resistência à Tração
5.
Naturwissenschaften ; 108(3): 22, 2021 May 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33945014

RESUMO

Most spiders use major ampullate silk (MAS) to perform many functions across their lifetimes, including prey capture, vibratory signal detection, and safety/dragline. To accommodate their various needs, adult spiders can use inducible variability to tailor MAS with specific mechanical properties. However, it is currently unknown whether this inducible mechanical variability develops gradually or remains consistent across spider size. Supercontraction -a process by which "native-state" silk fibers axially shrink when exposed to water or high humidity-can be used to reveal the extent of inducible variability in MAS. Supercontraction removes some processing effects that occur during the spinning of the solid fiber from its liquid precursor by allowing a native-state MAS fiber to return to a low energy "ground-state". Here, we examined the relative extent of inducible variability of MAS across spider size by assessing supercontraction properties and the difference between ground- and native-state MAS tensile properties using silk from the huntsman spider Heteropoda venatoria (Sparassidae). Stiffness of forcibly pulled native-state silk increased by 200% with spider size. After exposure to 90% RH and subsequent supercontraction, axial shrinkage of native-state silk fibers increased by 15% in larger spiders. Supercontracted, ground-state fibers demonstrated a 200% increase in extensibility across spider size. Our results indicate a gradual increase in inducible variability of MAS mechanical properties across spider size potentially caused by shifts in internal processing or chemical composition. These findings imply both development of inducible variability and changes in use of MAS as a safety line or aiding jumps across a spider's lifetime.


Assuntos
Tamanho Corporal/fisiologia , Seda/química , Aranhas/anatomia & histologia , Aranhas/química , Resistência à Tração , Animais
6.
Integr Comp Biol ; 61(4): 1432-1439, 2021 10 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33856489

RESUMO

Spider viscid silk adheres to insects in orb webs and is a "smart-adhesive" that quickly changes droplet size, viscosity, and adhesiveness in response to atmospheric humidity. Different species of spiders "tune" water uptake to match the humidity of their foraging environments, achieving a similar "universal" viscosity that optimizes tradeoffs in spreading versus cohesive bulk energy needed to enhance adhesion. Too much water lowers viscosity so that the glue spreads well, but cohesive failure occurs easily, generating poor adhesion. However, the optimal viscosity model of adhesion is based on experiments using smooth glass. Here we test the hypothesis that a less viscous, "over-lubricated" glue, which shows poor adhesion on smooth glass, will be stickier on hairy insects because of its greater ability to spread across three-dimensional rough surfaces. We ran adhesion tests of the furrow spider (Larinioides cornutus [Clerck 1757]) viscid silk on honey bee (Apis mellifera) thorax, with and without hairs, in either high or medium humidity. Our results show that "over-lubricated" glue increases adhesion on hairy surfaces, performing equally as well as an optimally viscous glue.


Assuntos
Aranhas , Adesividade , Adesivos , Animais , Abelhas , Insetos , Seda
7.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33723624

RESUMO

We develop a mathematical model to capture the web dynamics of slingshot spiders (Araneae: Theridiosomatidae), which utilize a tension line to deform their orb webs into conical springs to hunt flying insects. Slingshot spiders are characterized by their ultrafast launch speeds and accelerations (exceeding 1300 [Formula: see text]), however a theoretical approach to characterize the underlying spatiotemporal web dynamics remains missing. To address this knowledge gap, we develop a 2D-coupled damped oscillator model of the web. Our model reveals three key insights into the dynamics of slingshot motion. First, the tension line plays a dual role: enabling the spider to load elastic energy into the web for a quick launch (in milliseconds) to displacements of 10-15 body lengths, but also enabling the spider to halt quickly, attenuating inertial oscillations. Second, the dominant energy dissipation mechanism is viscous drag by the silk lines - acting as a low Reynolds number parachute. Third, the web exhibits underdamped oscillatory dynamics through a finely-tuned balance between the radial line forces, the tension line force and viscous drag dissipation. Together, our work suggests that the conical geometry and tension-line enables the slingshot web to act as both an elastic spring and a shock absorber, for the multi-functional roles of risky predation and self-preservation.


Assuntos
Fenômenos Biomecânicos/fisiologia , Modelos Teóricos , Seda/fisiologia , Aranhas/fisiologia , Velocidade de Caminhada/fisiologia , Animais , Comportamento Predatório/fisiologia , Fatores de Tempo , Gravação em Vídeo/métodos
8.
J Exp Biol ; 223(Pt 5)2020 02 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32001544

RESUMO

Composites, both natural and synthetic, achieve novel functionality by combining two or more constituent materials. For example, the earliest adhesive silk in spider webs - cribellate silk - is composed of stiff axial fibers and coiled fibers surrounded by hundreds of sticky cribellate nanofibrils. Yet, little is known of how fiber types interact to enable capture of insect prey with cribellate silk. To understand the roles of each constituent fiber during prey capture, we compared the tensile performance of native-state and manipulated threads produced by the cribellate spider Psechrus clavis, and the adhesion of native threads along a smooth surface and hairy bee thorax. We found that the coiled fiber increases the work to fracture of the entire cribellate thread by up to 20-fold. We also found that the axial fiber breaks multiple times during deformation, an unexpected observation that indicates: (i) the axial fiber continues to contribute work even after breakage, and (ii) the cribellate nanofibrils may perform a previously unidentified role as a binder material that distributes forces throughout the thread. Work of adhesion increased on surfaces with more surface structures (hairy bee thorax) corresponding to increased deformation of the coiled fiber. Together, our observations highlight how the synergistic interactions among the constituents of this natural composite adhesive enhance functionality. These highly extensible threads may serve to expose additional cribellate nanofibrils to form attachment points with prey substrata while also immobilizing prey as they sink into the web due to gravity.


Assuntos
Comportamento Predatório , Seda/química , Aranhas/química , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos
9.
J R Soc Interface ; 17(162): 20190792, 2020 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31992163

RESUMO

Contaminants decrease adhesive strength by interfering with substrate contact. Spider webs adhering to moths present an ideal model to investigate how natural adhesives overcome contamination because moths' sacrificial layer of scales rubs off on sticky silk, facilitating escape. However, Cyrtarachninae spiders have evolved gluey capture threads that adhere well to moths. Cyrtarachne capture threads contain large glue droplets oversaturated with water, readily flowing but also prone to drying out. Here, we compare the spreading and adhesion of Cyrtarachne akirai glue on intact mothwings, denuded cuticle and glass to the glue of a common orb-weaving spider, Larinioides cornutus, to understand how C. akirai glue overcomes dirty surfaces. Videos show that C. akirai's glue spreading accelerates along the underlying moth cuticle after the glue seeps beneath the moth scales-not seen on denuded cuticle or hydrophilic glass. Larinioides cornutus glue droplets failed to penetrate the moth scales, their force of adhesion thus limited by the strength of attachment of scales to the cuticle. The large size and low viscosity of C. akirai glue droplets function together to use the three-dimensional topography of the moth's scales against itself via capillary forces. Infrared spectroscopy shows C. akirai glue droplets readily lose free-flowing water. We hypothesize that this loss of water leads to increased viscosity during spreading, increasing cohesive forces during pull-off. This glue's two-phase behaviour shows how natural selection can leverage a defensive specialization of prey against themselves and highlights a new design principle for synthetic adhesives for adhering to troublesome surfaces.


Assuntos
Mariposas , Aranhas , Adesivos , Animais , Umidade , Comportamento Predatório , Seda
10.
Cladistics ; 36(1): 1-21, 2020 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34618955

RESUMO

We present a new phylogeny of the spider family Araneidae based on five genes (28S, 18S, COI, H3 and 16S) for 158 taxa, identified and mainly sequenced by us. This includes 25 outgroups and 133 araneid ingroups representing the subfamilies Zygiellinae Simon, 1929, Nephilinae Simon, 1894, and the typical araneids, here informally named the "ARA Clade". The araneid genera analysed here include roughly 90% of all currently named araneid species. The ARA Clade is the primary focus of this analysis. In taxonomic terms, outgroups comprise 22 genera and 11 families, and the ingroup comprises three Zygiellinae and four Nephilinae genera, and 85 ARA Clade genera (ten new). Within the ARA Clade, we recognize ten informal groups that contain at least three genera each and are supported under Bayesian posterior probabilities (≥ 0.95): "Caerostrines" (Caerostris, Gnolus and Testudinaria), "Micrathenines" (Acacesia, Micrathena, Ocrepeira, Scoloderus and Verrucosa), "Eriophorines" (Acanthepeira, Alpaida, Eriophora, Parawixia and Wagneriana), "Backobourkiines" (Acroaspis, Backobourkia, Carepalxis, Novakiella, Parawixia, Plebs, Singa and three new genera), "Argiopines" (Arachnura, Acusilas, Argiope, Cyrtophora, Gea, Lariniaria and Mecynogea), "Cyrtarachnines" (Aranoethra, Cyrtarachne, Paraplectana, Pasilobus and Poecilopachys), "Mastophorines" (Celaenia, Exechocentrus and Mastophora,), "Nuctenines" (Larinia, Larinioides and Nuctenea), "Zealaraneines" (Colaranea, Cryptaranea, Paralarinia, Zealaranea and two new genera) and "Gasteracanthines" (Augusta, Acrosomoides, Austracantha, Gasteracantha, Isoxya, Macracantha, Madacantha, Parmatergus and Thelacantha). Few of these groups are currently corroborated by morphology, behaviour, natural history or biogeography. We also include the large genus Araneus, along with Aculepeira, Agalenatea, Anepsion, Araniella, Cercidia, Chorizopes, Cyclosa, Dolophones, Eriovixia, Eustala, Gibbaranea, Hingstepeira, Hypognatha, Kaira, Larinia, Mangora, Metazygia, Metepeira, Neoscona, Paraplectanoides, Perilla, Poltys, Pycnacantha, Spilasma and Telaprocera, but the placement of these genera was generally ambiguous, except for Paraplectanoides, which is strongly supported as sister to traditional Nephilinae. Araneus, Argiope, Eriophora and Larinia are polyphyletic, Araneus implying nine new taxa of genus rank, and Eriophora and Larinia two each. In Araneus and Eriophora, polyphyly was usually due to north temperate generic concepts being used as dumping grounds for species from southern hemisphere regions, e.g. South-East Asia, Australia or New Zealand. Although Araneidae is one of the better studied spider families, too little natural history and/or morphological data are available across these terminals to draw any strong evolutionary conclusions. However, the classical orb web is reconstructed as plesiomorphic for Araneidae, with a single loss in "cyrtarachnines"-"mastophorines". Web decorations (collectively known as stabilimenta) evolved perhaps five times. Sexual dimorphism generally results from female body size increase with few exceptions; dimorphic taxa are not monophyletic and revert to monomorphism in a few cases.

11.
Commun Biol ; 2: 275, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31372514

RESUMO

Darwin's bark spider (Caerostris darwini) produces giant orb webs from dragline silk that can be twice as tough as other silks, making it the toughest biological material. This extreme toughness comes from increased extensibility relative to other draglines. We show C. darwini dragline-producing major ampullate (MA) glands highly express a novel silk gene transcript (MaSp4) encoding a protein that diverges markedly from closely related proteins and contains abundant proline, known to confer silk extensibility, in a unique GPGPQ amino acid motif. This suggests C. darwini evolved distinct proteins that may have increased its dragline's toughness, enabling giant webs. Caerostris darwini's MA spinning ducts also appear unusually long, potentially facilitating alignment of silk proteins into extremely tough fibers. Thus, a suite of novel traits from the level of genes to spinning physiology to silk biomechanics are associated with the unique ecology of Darwin's bark spider, presenting innovative designs for engineering biomaterials.


Assuntos
Fibroínas/química , Proteínas de Insetos/fisiologia , Aranhas/genética , Transcriptoma , Animais , Proteínas de Insetos/genética , Aranhas/anatomia & histologia
12.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 9092, 2019 06 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31235797

RESUMO

Web-building spiders are an extremely diverse predatory group due to their use of physiologically differentiated silk types in webs. Major shifts in silk functional properties are classically attributed to innovations in silk genes and protein expression. Here, we disentangle the effects of spinning behavior on silk performance of the earliest types of capture threads in spider webs for the first time. Progradungula otwayensis produces two variations of cribellate silk in webs: ladder lines are stereotypically combed with the calamistrum while supporting rail lines contain silk that is naturally uncombed, spun without the intervention of the legs. Combed cribellate silk is highly extensible and adhesive suggesting that the reserve warp and cribellate fibrils brings them into tension only near or after the underlying axial fibers are broken. In contrast, these three fiber components are largely aligned in the uncombed threads and deform as a single composite unit that is 5-10x stronger, but significantly less adhesive, allowing them to act as structural elements in the web. Our study reveals that cribellate silk can occupy a surprisingly diverse performance space, accessible through simple changes in spider behavior, which may have facilitated the impressive diversification of web architectures utilizing this ancient silk.


Assuntos
Seda/metabolismo , Aranhas/metabolismo , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Comportamento Predatório
13.
R Soc Open Sci ; 5(11): 181296, 2018 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30564415

RESUMO

Orb webs produced by araneoid spiders depend upon aggregate glue-coated capture threads to retain their prey. Moths are challenging prey for most spiders because their scales detach and contaminate the glue droplets, significantly decreasing adhesion. Cyrtarachne are moth-specialist orb-weaving spiders whose capture threads adhere well to moths. We compare the adhesive properties and chemistry of Cyrtarachne aggregate glue to other orb-weaving spiders to test hypotheses about their structure, chemistry and performance that could explain the strength of Cyrtarachne glue. We show that the unusually large glue droplets on Cyrtarachne capture threads make them approximately 8 times more adhesive on glass substrate than capture threads from typical orb-weaving species, but Cyrtarachne adhesion is similar to that of other species after normalization by glue volume. Glue viscosity reversibly changes over 1000-fold in response to atmospheric humidity, and the adhesive strength of many species of orb spiders is maximized at a viscosity of approximately 105-106 cst where the contributions of spreading and bulk cohesion are optimized. By contrast, viscosity of Cyrtarachne aggregate glue droplets is approximately 1000 times lower at maximum adhesive humidity, likely facilitating rapid spreading across moth scales. Water uptake by glue droplets is controlled, in part, by hygroscopic low molecular weight compounds. NMR showed evidence that Cyrtarachne glue contains a variety of unknown low molecular weight compounds. These compounds may help explain how Cyrtarachne produces such exceptionally large and low viscosity glue droplets, and also why these glue droplets rapidly lose water volume after brief ageing or exposure to even slightly dry (e.g. < 80% RH) conditions, permanently reducing their adhesion. We hypothesize that the combination of large glue droplet size and low viscosity helps Cyrtarachne glue to penetrate the gaps between moth scales.

14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29992763

RESUMO

Orb webs intercept and retain prey so spiders may subdue them. Orb webs are composed of sticky, compliant spirals of capture silk spun across strong, stiff major ampullate silk threads. Interplay between differences in the mechanical properties of these silks is crucial for prey capture. Most orb webs depend upon insects contacting several radial and capture threads for successful retention. Moths, however, escape quickly from most orb webs due to the sacrificial scales covering their bodies. Cyrtarachne orb webs are unusual as they contain a reduced number of capture threads and moths stick unusually well to single threads. We aimed to determine how the tensile properties of the capture spiral and radial threads spun by Cyrtarachne operate in retention of moth prey. A NanoBionix UTM was used to quantify the material properties of flagelliform and major ampullate threads to test if Cyrtarachne's reduced web architecture is accompanied by improvements in tensile performance of its silk. Silk threads showed tensile properties typical of less-specialized orb-weavers, with the exception of high extensibility in radial threads. Radial thread diameters were 62.5% smaller than flagelliform threads, where commonly the two are roughly similar. We utilized our tensile data to create a finite element model of Cyrtarachne's web to investigate energy dissipation during prey impact. Large cross-sectional area of the flagelliform threads played a key role in enabling single capture threads to withstand prey impact. Rather than extraordinary silk, Cyrtarachne utilizes structural changes in the size and attachment of silk threads to facilitate web function.

15.
Biomacromolecules ; 19(7): 3048-3057, 2018 07 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29897739

RESUMO

The aggregate glue in spider webs is composed of hygroscopic low molecular mass compounds (LMMCs), glycoproteins and water. The LMMCs absorb atmospheric water and solvate the glycoproteins to spread and adhere to flying insects upon contact. The glue viscosity varies with humidity and there is an optimum range of viscosity where the adhesion is maximum. LMMCs composition and the humidity at which glue viscosity is optimized vary greatly among spider species. These findings suggest that spiders adapt to forage in diverse habitats by "tuning" LMMCs composition or how LMMCs interact with glycoproteins to control water uptake and adhesion. To test these hypotheses, we analyzed the LMMCs for spiders from diverse habitats and performed water uptake studies on intact glue droplets, isolated glue constituents, and synthetic LMMCs. Even though glue droplets showed differences in water uptake among spider species, we found no differences among species in hygroscopicity of natural or synthetic LMMCs mixtures. This demonstrates that LMMCs composition alone is insufficient to explain interspecific differences in water uptake of spider glues and instead support the hypothesis that an interaction between LMMCs and glycoproteins mediate differences in water uptake and adhesion.


Assuntos
Adesivos/química , Seda/química , Aranhas/química , Animais , Ecossistema , Glicoproteínas/química , Umidade , Seda/metabolismo , Aranhas/metabolismo , Viscosidade
16.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 1890, 2018 05 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29789602

RESUMO

Adhesion in humid environments is fundamentally challenging because of the presence of interfacial bound water. Spiders often hunt in wet habitats and overcome this challenge using sticky aggregate glue droplets whose adhesion is resistant to interfacial failure under humid conditions. The mechanism by which spider aggregate glue avoids interfacial failure in humid environments is still unknown. Here, we investigate the mechanism of aggregate glue adhesion by using interface-sensitive spectroscopy in conjunction with infrared spectroscopy. We demonstrate that glycoproteins act as primary binding agents at the interface. As humidity increases, we observe reversible changes in the interfacial secondary structure of glycoproteins. Surprisingly, we do not observe liquid-like water at the interface, even though liquid-like water increases inside the bulk with increasing humidity. We hypothesize that the hygroscopic compounds in aggregate glue sequester interfacial water. Using hygroscopic compounds to sequester interfacial water provides a novel design principle for developing water-resistant synthetic adhesives.

17.
J Exp Biol ; 221(Pt 6)2018 03 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29581217

RESUMO

Orb-weaving spiders use adhesive threads to delay the escape of insects from their webs until the spiders can locate and subdue the insects. These viscous threads are spun as paired flagelliform axial fibers coated by a cylinder of solution derived from the aggregate glands. As low molecular mass compounds (LMMCs) in the aggregate solution attract atmospheric moisture, the enlarging cylinder becomes unstable and divides into droplets. Within each droplet an adhesive glycoprotein core condenses. The plasticity and axial line extensibility of the glycoproteins are maintained by hygroscopic LMMCs. These compounds cause droplet volume to track changes in humidity and glycoprotein viscosity to vary approximately 1000-fold over the course of a day. Natural selection has tuned the performance of glycoprotein cores to the humidity of a species' foraging environment by altering the composition of its LMMCs. Thus, species from low-humidity habits have more hygroscopic threads than those from humid forests. However, at their respective foraging humidities, these species' glycoproteins have remarkably similar viscosities, ensuring optimal droplet adhesion by balancing glycoprotein adhesion and cohesion. Optimal viscosity is also essential for integrating the adhesion force of multiple droplets. As force is transferred to a thread's support line, extending droplets draw it into a parabolic configuration, implementing a suspension bridge mechanism that sums the adhesive force generated over the thread span. Thus, viscous capture threads extend an orb spider's phenotype as a highly integrated complex of large proteins and small molecules that function as a self-assembling, highly tuned, environmentally responsive, adhesive biomaterial. Understanding the synergistic role of chemistry and design in spider adhesives, particularly the ability to stick in wet conditions, provides insight in designing synthetic adhesives for biomedical applications.


Assuntos
Adesivos/química , Proteínas de Artrópodes/fisiologia , Ecossistema , Glicoproteínas/fisiologia , Aranhas/fisiologia , Animais , Umidade , Seda/química , Aranhas/química
18.
Nat Commun ; 8(1): 2278, 2017 12 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29273708

RESUMO

Colour produced by wavelength-dependent light scattering is a key component of visual communication in nature and acts particularly strongly in visual signalling by structurally-coloured animals during courtship. Two miniature peacock spiders (Maratus robinsoni and M. chrysomelas) court females using tiny structured scales (~ 40 × 10 µm2) that reflect the full visual spectrum. Using TEM and optical modelling, we show that the spiders' scales have 2D nanogratings on microscale 3D convex surfaces with at least twice the resolving power of a conventional 2D diffraction grating of the same period. Whereas the long optical path lengths required for light-dispersive components to resolve individual wavelengths constrain current spectrometers to bulky sizes, our nano-3D printed prototypes demonstrate that the design principle of the peacock spiders' scales could inspire novel, miniature light-dispersive components.


Assuntos
Escamas de Animais/ultraestrutura , Cor , Fenômenos Ópticos , Aranhas/ultraestrutura , Animais , Corte , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão , Nanoestruturas , Óptica e Fotônica , Impressão Tridimensional , Análise Espectral/instrumentação
19.
Naturwissenschaften ; 104(7-8): 67, 2017 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28752413

RESUMO

The origin of viscid capture silk in orb webs, from cribellate silk-spinning ancestors, is a key innovation correlated with significant diversification of web-building spiders. Ancestral cribellate silk consists of dry nanofibrils surrounding a stiff, axial fiber that adheres to prey through van der Waals interactions, capillary forces, and physical entanglement. In contrast, viscid silk uses chemically adhesive aqueous glue coated onto a highly compliant and extensible flagelliform core silk. The extensibility of the flagelliform fiber accounts for half of the total work of adhesion for viscid silk and is enabled by water in the aqueous coating. Recent cDNA libraries revealed the expression of flagelliform silk proteins in cribellate orb-weaving spiders. We hypothesized that the presence of flagelliform proteins in cribellate silk could have allowed for a gradual shift in mechanical performance of cribellate axial silk, whose effect was masked by the dry nature of its adhesive. We measured supercontraction and mechanical performance of cribellate axial silk, in wet and dry states, for two species of cribellate orb web-weaving spiders to see if water enabled flagelliform silk-like performance. We found that compliance and extensibility of wet cribellate silk increased compared to dry state as expected. However, when compared to other silk types, the response to water was more similar to other web silks, like major and minor ampullate silk, than to viscid silk. These findings support the punctuated evolution of viscid silk mechanical performance.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Aranhas , Animais , Comportamento Predatório , Seda , Água
20.
J Exp Biol ; 220(Pt 11): 1975-1983, 2017 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28566355

RESUMO

Elucidating the mechanisms of colour production in organisms is important for understanding how selection acts upon a variety of behaviours. Spiders provide many spectacular examples of colours used in courtship, predation, defence and thermoregulation, but are thought to lack many types of pigments common in other animals. Ommochromes, bilins and eumelanin have been identified in spiders, but not carotenoids or melanosomes. Here, we combined optical microscopy, refractive index matching, confocal Raman microspectroscopy and electron microscopy to investigate the basis of several types of colourful patches in spiders. We obtained four major results. First, we show that spiders use carotenoids to produce yellow, suggesting that such colours may be used for condition-dependent courtship signalling. Second, we established the Raman signature spectrum for ommochromes, facilitating the identification of ommochromes in a variety of organisms in the future. Third, we describe a potential new pigmentary-structural colour interaction that is unusual because of the use of long wavelength structural colour in combination with a slightly shorter wavelength pigment in the production of red. Finally, we present the first evidence for the presence of melanosomes in arthropods, using both scanning and transmission electron microscopy, overturning the assumption that melanosomes are a synapomorphy of vertebrates. Our research shows that spiders have a much richer colour production palette than previously thought, and this has implications for colour diversification and function in spiders and other arthropods.


Assuntos
Pigmentação , Aranhas/química , Animais , Carotenoides/análise , Cor , Melanossomas , Microscopia Eletrônica , Fenotiazinas/análise , Refratometria , Seda/química , Análise Espectral Raman , Aranhas/ultraestrutura
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