Bioterrorism“Killer silk” kills anthrax and other microbes in minutes

Published 24 May 2012

A simple, inexpensive dip-and-dry treatment can convert ordinary silk into a fabric that kills disease-causing bacteria — even the armor-coated spores of microbes like anthrax — in minutes

The latest episode in the American Chemical Society’s (ACS’) series Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions podcast series describes a simple, inexpensive dip-and-dry treatment that can convert ordinary silk into a fabric that kills disease-causing bacteria — even the armor-coated spores of microbes like anthrax — in minutes.

This new “killer silk” has many potential uses, including make-shift curtains and other protective coatings which protect homes and other buildings in the event of a terrorist attack with anthrax.

Based on an article by Rajesh R. Naik, Ph.D., and colleagues in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, the new podcast is available without charge at iTunes and at the ACS Web site.

An American Chemical Society release reports thatNaik points out in the podcast that in adverse conditions, bacteria of the Bacillus species, which includes anthrax, become dormant spores, enclosing themselves in a tough coating. These spores can survive heat, radiation, antibiotics, and harsh environmental conditions, and some have sprung back to life after 250 million years. Certain chemicals — most popular among which are oxidizing agents, including some chlorine compounds — can destroy bacterial spores, and they have been applied to fabrics like cotton, polyester, nylon and Kevlar. These treated fabrics are effective against many bacteria, but less so against spores. The researchers tried a similar coating on silk to see if it could perform better against these hardy microbes.

They developed a chlorinated form of silk, which involves soaking silk in a solution that includes a substance similar to household bleach and letting it dry. Silk treated for just an hour killed essentially all of the E. coli bacteria tested on it within 10 minutes and did similarly well against spores of a close anthrax relative used as a stand-in. “Given the potent bactericidal and sporicidal activity of the chlorinated silk fabrics prepared in this study, silk-Cl materials may find use in a variety of applications,” the authors say. Other applications, they add, include purifying water in humanitarian relief efforts and in filters or to mitigate the effects of toxic substances.

— Read more in Matthew B. Dickerson, “Sporicidal/Bactericidal Textiles via the Chlorination of Silk,” ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 4, no. 3 (21 February 2012): 1724–32 (DOI: 10.1021/am2018496)