Salty water makes barnacles stick
30 May 2007
Barnacle cement is strong stuff, as anyone who has ever laboured to chip barnacles off the hull of a boat will tell you. The sticky trickery has now been revealed by researchers at Okayama University's Marine Biotechnology Institute in Japan. The researchers found that the saltiness of seawater triggers the creatures' natural bond.
Kei Kamino and colleagues synthesised a peptide based on barnacle cement and showed how it formed a strong glue. 'This self-assembly is one of the indispensable functions of underwater attachment,' they report.

Strong bond: barnacle peptide forms into a mesh-like glue © ACS: Biomacromoleclues |
James Callow from the University of Birmingham, UK told Chemistry World that natural biological adhesives can make valuable medical tools. 'These molecules can inform the formulation of surgical glues since they are able to bind to a wet surface,' he said.
'Understanding of the molecular basis of how these adhesives work has, so far, been painfully slow,' said Callow. 'This study has broken new ground and should inspire more rapid development of nanocomposites that mimic those found in nature.'
Victoria Gill
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References
M Nakano et al, Biomacromolecules, 2007, Doi: 10.1021/bm0612236
Also of interest
23 August 2005: Mussels flex their byssi in response to surface chemistry
Mussels alter their binding behaviour in response to the properties of the surface to which they are binding, report British and American researchers.
Highlighting published papers in Nanoscience at the RSC
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