
Naval Surface Warffare Panama City Division (NSWC PCD) scientist and engineers demonstrate the elasticity of the hagfish slime secreted from the Pacific hagfish in a lab aboard NSWC PCD Nov. 29, 2016. Pictured from left to right: Dr. Josh Kogot, Dr. Michelle Kincer and Dr. Ryan Kincer. U.S. Navy photo by Ron Newsome
A team of U.S. Navy scientists and engineers at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Panama City Division (NSWC PCD) have successfully recreated a natural material used for marine wildlife defense to assist military personnel.
Biochemist Dr. Josh Kogot and Materials Engineer Dr. Ryan Kincer have produced a synthetic component of hagfish slime from the alpha and gamma proteins of the Pacific hagfish.
The Pacific hagfish, also known as slime eels, are bottom-dwelling scavengers which live on the ocean floor. The hagfish can secrete slime to protect themselves by obstructing the gills of predators which come into contact with the slime.
According to Kincer, hagfish slime consists of two protein-based components — a thread and a mucin.
“The coiled up thread behaves like a spring and quickly unravels upon contact with water due to stored energy,” said Kincer. “The mucin binds to water and constrains the flow between the micro channels created by the thread dispersion. The interaction between the thread, mucin, and seawater creates a three-dimensional, viscoelastic network. Over time, the thread begins to collapse on itself, causing the slime to slowly dissipate. Studies have shown the hagfish secretion can expand up to 10,000 times its initial volume.”
The hagfish slime thread has been compared to spider silk. Both are natural, renewable materials which could one day replace synthetic products derived from petroleum-based precursors. Kogot said the slime thread has comparable mechanical properties to Kevlar, a synthetic fiber used as a reinforcing agent for rubber products and protective gear.
During synthetic recreation, alpha and gamma proteins were produced in an Escherichia coli bacteria, or E.coli, where each protein was recovered from the bacteria after a series of isolation and purification steps. The alpha and gamma proteins were later combined together and rapidly assembled in a crosslinking solution. A sample of natural and synthetic hagfish threads were compared using a scanning electron microscope to visually confirm the production of the synthetic threads.
The intended use of the synthetic slime is to provide non-lethal and non-kinetic defense to the fleet.
“The synthetic hagfish slime may be used for ballistics protection, firefighting, anti-fouling, diver protection, or anti-shark spray,” said Kogot. “The possibilities are endless. Our goal is to produce a substance that can act as non-lethal and non-kinetic defense to protect the warfighter.”
Kincer said the addition of using a material such as the slime will be valuable to the U.S. Navy.
“Researchers have called the hagfish slime one of the most unique biomaterials known,” said Kincer. “For the U.S. Navy to have its hands on it or a material that acts similar would be beneficial. From a tactical standpoint, it would be interesting to have a material that can change the properties of the water at dilute concentrations in a matter of seconds.”
The effort to create new synthetic means to behave like the natural hagfish slime is supported by Navy Innovative Science and Engineering (NISE) funding and the Office of Naval Research Code 32, ocean battlespace sensing department. The team is researching ways to increase the slime’s surface attachment capability, potential delivery systems, and enhanced stability in various environments. From there, Kogot and Kincer will continue to look for innovative applications and explore different variations and properties of the material.
They are currently working to increase the slime protein scale and improve protein assembly.
Learn more: US Navy Synthetically Recreates Biomaterial to Assist Military Personnel
Receive an email update when we add a new BIOMIMICRY article.
The Latest on: Hagfish slime
via Google News
The Latest on: Hagfish slime
- We could all use Something Good right now, right?on January 20, 2021 at 8:24 pm
Join Chief Meteorologist Travis Meyer and the News On 6 Weather Team to learn about the different types of severe weather in our state and what to do when it happens. Travis Meyer’s Weather 101 ...
- Search Results for: 13on January 16, 2021 at 4:00 pm
With the popularity of Nixie clocks, we’d be forgiven for thinking that the glowing tubes are only good for applications with a stately pace of change. But we forget that before they became the ...
- What’s Happening for Feb. 2on January 15, 2021 at 9:25 pm
A special presentation is planned for 2 p.m. on the hagfish, which can make 4 cups of slime in a fraction of a second. The free event runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the center, 500 Adams St. NE ...
- Director Roseanne Liang Spoke With Actual WW2 Pilots For Her Gremlin Thriller ‘Shadow In The Cloud’on December 28, 2020 at 7:55 am
In particular, Liang was mainly inspired by the hagfish, a marine creature that produces slime as a defense mechanism. “Their tongues are incredible; they look like vagina dentata — they just ...
- Watch: Hagfishes use skin and slime to survive attackon December 25, 2020 at 4:00 pm
Researchers say footage of attacks (including the video above), lab studies of how hagfish defensive slime functions, and the fact they are rarely found in the stomachs of other fish suggest that ...
- Hagfishes: how much slime can a slime eel make?on October 21, 2020 at 4:02 am
Their way around this is that they don't hold the slime in their bodies in its final form. Hagfish slime has three main components: seawater, mucins and slime threads. Data shows that hagfish slime is ...
- Hagfish Slime: Biomaterial Of The Future?on August 13, 2020 at 9:54 am
One startup company for example, Benthic Labs, turned to the Hagfish with the ultimate goal of developing a biodegradable polymer made out of components of the slime itself. They think the slime ...
- The Hagfish Is the Slimy Sea Creature of Your Nightmareson February 3, 2017 at 9:10 pm
Save 84% off the newsstand price! After an epic 3,000 mile journey from Canada and the northern U.S. to the Oyamel fir forests of Central Mexico, these Monarch butterflies are ready to fulfill ...
- School of Biomedical Engineeringon October 14, 2016 at 7:04 pm
The main goal of my group is to unveil the design rules underlying the unique mechanical properties of protein assemblies within cells and tissues. We are interested in both bottom-up and top-down ...
via Bing News