Scientists Created Mutant 'Super-Spiders' That Produce Glowing Red Silk
7 Articles
7 Articles
The World's First Genetically Modified Spider Spins Glowing Red Silk
By now, CRISPR has sliced and diced its way through the genomes of everything from bananas to beagles to babies. CRISPR tech’s latest target is the humble and terrifying spider. Scientists gave spiders red, glow-in-the-dark silk so we can finally have an organic option when selecting Halloween decorations. At the University of Bayreuth, a team of researchers successfully edited the DNA of the common house spider (Parasteatoda tepidariorum) to sp…
Scientists Created Mutant 'Super-Spiders' That Produce Glowing Red Silk
Spider-web-with-dewdrops-in-morning Scientists used CRISPR gene editing technology to make spiders produce glowing red silk. They did this in an effort to eventually have spiders create “supermaterials” for use in a wide range of applications and in industries such as textiles, medicine, and aerospace. The results of this new research, published in the scientific journal Angewandte Chemie, reveal they were able to do this using just a species of…
The world’s first genetically modified spider could lead to new ‘supermaterials’
Researchers funded by the U.S. Navy have used gene-editing technology to make house spiders produce red fluorescent silk. This might seem like a quirky scientific novelty, but the breakthrough is a critical step toward modifying spider silk properties and creating new “supermaterials” for industries ranging from textiles to aerospace. The team at Germany’s University of Bayreuth, led by Professor Thomas Scheibel, successfully applied CRISPR-Cas9…
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