SALT LAKE CITY — A bio-art project to create bulletproof skin has given a Utah State researcher even more hope his genetically engineered spider silk can be used to help surgeons heal large wounds and create artificial tendons and ligaments.
Researcher Randy Lewis and his collaborators gained worldwide attention recently when they found a commercially viable way to manufacture silk fibers using goats and silkworms that had spider genes inserted into their makeup.
Spider silk is one of the strongest fibers known and five times stronger than steel. Lewis’ fibers are not that strong but much stronger than silk spun by ordinary worms.
With Lewis’ help, Dutch artist Jalila Essaidi conducted an experiment weaving a lattice of human skin cells and silk that was capable of stopping bullets fired at reduced speeds.
‘Randy and I were moved by the same drive I think, curiosity about the outcome of the project,’ Essaidi said in an email interview. ‘Both the artist and scientist are inherently curious beings.’
Lewis thought the project was a bit off the wall at first, Essaidi acknowledged.
‘But in the end, what curious person can say no to a project like this?’ she said.
Essaidi, who used a European genetics-in-art grant to fund her project […]