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Materials fabrication from Bombyx mori silk fibroin.

Nature protocols (2011-10-01)
Danielle N Rockwood, Rucsanda C Preda, Tuna Yücel, Xiaoqin Wang, Michael L Lovett, David L Kaplan
ABSTRACT

Silk fibroin, derived from Bombyx mori cocoons, is a widely used and studied protein polymer for biomaterial applications. Silk fibroin has remarkable mechanical properties when formed into different materials, demonstrates biocompatibility, has controllable degradation rates from hours to years and can be chemically modified to alter surface properties or to immobilize growth factors. A variety of aqueous or organic solvent-processing methods can be used to generate silk biomaterials for a range of applications. In this protocol, we include methods to extract silk from B. mori cocoons to fabricate hydrogels, tubes, sponges, composites, fibers, microspheres and thin films. These materials can be used directly as biomaterials for implants, as scaffolding in tissue engineering and in vitro disease models, as well as for drug delivery.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Poly(vinyl alcohol), 87-90% hydrolyzed, average mol wt 30,000-70,000
Sigma-Aldrich
Hydrochloric acid, 36.5-38.0%, BioReagent, Molecular Biology
Avanti
18:1 (Δ9-Cis) PC (DOPC), Avanti Research - A Croda Brand
Avanti
18:1 (Δ9-Cis) PC (DOPC), Avanti Research - A Croda Brand