Bees and
ants make quality silk
Honeybee larvae produce silk to reinforce the wax cells in which
they pupate.
Moths and butterflies, particularly silkworms, are well
known producers of silk.
And we all know spiders use it for their webs. But they are not
the only invertebrates who make use of the strength and
versatility of silk.
Dr Tara Sutherland and her group from CSIRO Entomology are
looking at silks produced by other insects and the results of
their recent work have been published in Molecular Biology and
Evolution, in the paper Conservation of Essential Design
Features in Coiled Coil Silks.
“Most people are unaware that bees and ants produce silk but
they do and its molecular structure is very different to that of
the large protein, sheet structure of moth and spider silk. The
cocoon and nest silks we looked at consist of coiled coils - a
protein structural arrangement where multiple helices wind
around each other. This structure produces a light weight, very
tough silk,” she says.
“We had already identified the honeybee silk genes,” says Dr
Sutherland, “and now we have identified and sequenced the silk
genes of bumblebees, bulldog ants and weaver ants, and compared
these to honeybee silk genes. This let us identify the essential
design elements for the assembly and function of coiled coil
silks”.
“To do this, we identified and compared the coiled coil proteins
from cocoon and nest silks from species which span the
evolutionary tree of the social Hymenoptera (bees, ants and
wasps),” she says.
Bees and ants produce high-performance silk and, although the
silks in all these species are produced by the larvae and by the
same glands, they use them differently.
Honeybee larvae produce silk to reinforce the wax cells in which
they pupate, bulldog ant larvae spin solitary cocoons for
protection during pupation, bumblebee larvae spin cocoons within
wax hives (the cocoons are reused to store pollen and honey),
and weaver ants use their larvae as ‘tools’ to fasten fresh
plant leaves together to form large communal nests..
These groups of insects have evolved silks that are very tough
and stable in comparison to the classical sheet silks and it is
probable that the evolution of this remarkable material has
underpinned the success of the social Hymenoptera.
Coiled coil silks are common in aculeate social insects i.e.
those that have stings but not in aculeate parasitic wasps.
These social insects are higher up the evolutionary tree and the
coiled coil silks appear to have evolved about 155 million years
ago.

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