Caddisflies’
underwater silk adhesive might suture wounds.
Like silkworm moths, butterflies and spiders, caddisfly
larvae spin silk, but they do so underwater instead of on dry land. Now, University
of Utah
researchers have discovered why the fly’s silk is sticky when wet and how that
may make it valuable as an adhesive tape during surgery.
“Silk from caddisfly larvae - known to western fly fishermen as ‘rock rollers’
- may be useful some day as a medical bioadhesive for sticking to wet tissues,”
says Russell Stewart, an associate professor of bioengineering and principal
author of a new study of the fly silk’s chemical and structural properties.
“I picture it as sort of a wet Band-Aid, maybe used internally in surgery -
like using a piece of tape to close an incision as opposed to sutures,” he
says. “Gluing things together underwater is not easy. Have you ever tried to
put a Band-Aid on in the shower? This insect has been doing this for 150
million to 200 million years.”
The new study, funded by the National Science Foundation, is scheduled to be
published in
Biomacromolecules, a journal of the American
Chemical Society.
There are thousands of caddisfly species worldwide in an order of insects named
Trichoptera that are related to
Lepidoptera,
the order that includes moths and butterflies that spin dry silk. Because
caddisflies are eaten by trout, fly fishermen use caddisfly lures. Some species
spend their larval stages developing underwater, and build an inch-long,
tube-shaped case or shelter around themselves using sticky silk and grains of
rock or sand. Other species use silk, small sticks and pieces of leaves.
Each larva has a head and four legs that stick out from the tube. The larval
case often is conical because it gets wider as the larva grows. A caddisfly
larva eventually pupates, sealing off the tube as it develops into an adult fly
and then hatches.
Aquatic caddisflies and terrestrial butterflies and moths diverged from a
common silk-spinning ancestor some 150 million to 200 million years ago.
Caddisflies now live around the world in waters ranging from fast streams to
quiet marshes.
According to the study, “The caddisflies’ successful penetration into diverse
aquatic habitats is largely due to the inventive use by their larva of
underwater silk to build elaborate structures for protection and food
gathering.”
Caddisflies fall into subgroups;
Brachycentrus echo, the
species Stewart studied, is among the casemakers, which build their cases and
drag them along underwater as they forage for food. Some caddisfly larva are
retreatmakers, which build a stationary dome-shaped shelter glued to a rock,
with a silk net to catch passing food.

Photo courtesy of Fred Hayes.
From Sea Glue to Sticky Fly Silk
Stewart studies natural adhesives, including glue produced
in intertidal ocean waters by the sandcastle worm that has potential as glue
for repairing small broken bones. He became interested in caddisfly larva
adhesive silk tape after he was contacted by a Smithsonian Institution
scientist who showed him several of the tube-shaped larval cases.
“We looked inside a case through a microscope and saw these silk struts between
the rocks and realized this is really interesting,” Stewart says. “So I came
home and put on my fly fishing boots and started wandering mountain streams
looking for caddisfly larvae.”
Stewart and the study’s co-author, Ching Shuen Wang (who works in Stewart's
lab), studied the caddisfly species
B. echo from the lower
Provo River
about an hour south of Salt Lake City.
Bioengineering undergraduate student Nick Ashton gathered the fly larvae and
figured out how to keep them alive in the lab.
“There’s just a fascinating diversity of these insects,” Ashton says. “Their
adhesive is able to bond to a wide range of surfaces underwater: soft and hard,
organic and inorganic. If we could copy this adhesive, it would be useful on a
wide range of tissue types.”
Caddisfly larvae extrude adhesive silk ribbon out of an organ known as the
spinneret. The products of two silk glands converge there, so the extruded
adhesive looks like a double ribbon with a seam the long way. The larvae weave
this sticky mesh back and forth around sand grains, sticks or leaf pieces to
create the tubes they occupy.
Stewart and colleagues grew caddisfly larvae in aquariums, but with glass beads
instead of the sand and rock grains found in streams. The larvae expanded their
rock cases using the beads, which were glued together from the inside by wet
silk ribbons.
The researchers broke off some beads to obtain clean samples of silk. They
analyzed the silk using several methods, including scanning electron
microscopy, which showed how silk fibers stitched together the glass beads from
inside the shelter case.
“It’s like using Scotch tape on the inside of a box to hold it together,”
Stewart says. “It’s really like a tape more than anything else - a tape that
works underwater.”
Stewart hasn’t studied the strength of the caddisfly silk, but plans to do so.
“Individual threads aren’t very strong, but it lays down dozens of them,” he
says. “If we can copy this material and make tape out of it, the bond strength
would go up dramatically.”

This picture from a scanning electron microscope, magnified
100 times, shows a mesh of wet adhesive silk ribbon produced by a caddisfly
larva to stitch together the inside of its shelter case, made with glass beads
it was given in a laboratory aquarium. - Credit: University of Utah.
The Chemistry and Structure of Wet Silk from Caddisflies
Stewart’s study included detailed analysis of the chemistry
and structure of the caddisfly silk, showing how it is similar to what silkworm
moths produce for use in textiles and even to spider web silk, but with
adaptations that make it work underwater.
Stewart says his goal was to characterize the adhesive silk fiber “for the
purpose of trying to copy it” so a synthetic version can be used as a surgical
adhesive.
He found the caddisfly silk is a fiber made of large proteins named fibroin
with an amino acid named serine making up a fifth of the amino acids in
fibroin.
The key difference between dry silks from moths and butterflies and wet silks
from caddisflies is that the serines in the silk from caddisflies are
“phosphorylated,” meaning phosphates are added to the serines as the fibroin
silk protein is synthesized.
“Phosphates are well-known adhesion promoters used in dental fixtures such as
crowns or fillings,” says Stewart. “They are also in latex paints that are
water-based, and the phosphates increase the adhesion of those paints. The
paint industry discovered this fairly recently. Caddisflies have been doing
this for at least 150 million years.”
The phosphates attached to the serines are negatively charged. Other amino
acids in the protein are positively charged. Stewart found that these are key
factors in making silk underwater. Chains of proteins - each with alternating
regions of positive and negative charges - line up in parallel with positive
and negative charges attracting each other.
“Imagine those chains aligned side-by-side, but staggered so the pluses and
minuses are lined up, which then forms silk fibers with lots and lots of these
protein chains in one fiber,” Stewart says. “You wouldn’t be able to make
shirts out of it, but you might be able to make wet Band-Aids.”
Stewart made a counterintuitive finding about how wet silks are made. “These
fibroin proteins that make up the silks are water-soluble because of the
electrical charges,” he says. “Ironically - and this is our hypothesis for now
- the association of those plus or minus charges makes them water-insoluble.
This is how you make a silk fiber under water.”
Comparison with amino acids from three other caddisfly species found great
similarities, suggesting other caddisflies also use phosphorylation to spin
silk underwater.
Stewart says caddisfly silk and sandcastle worm glue are similar: their
proteins are heavily phosphorylated and have a large number of positively
charged amino acids. He also says the ability to make adhesives underwater now
has been identified in four phyla - major categories of living organisms - that
include caddisflies, sandcastle worms, mussels and sea cucumbers.
“They came to this underwater adhesion solution completely independently,”
Stewart says, showing that the underwater adhesive evolved because of its value
in helping the creatures live and thrive.
For information on the University of Utah College of Engineering,
visit www.coe.utah.edu.
Source: University
of Utah. Links