Literature DB >> 33016698

Guiding Bacterial Activity for Biofabrication of Complex Materials via Controlled Wetting of Superhydrophobic Surfaces.

Luiz G Greca1, Mahdi Rafiee1, Alp Karakoç1,2, Janika Lehtonen1, Bruno D Mattos1, Blaise L Tardy1, Orlando J Rojas1,3.   

Abstract

Superhydrophobic surfaces are promising for preventing fouling and the formation of biofilms, with important implications in the food chain, maritime transport, and health sciences, among others. In this work, we exploit the interplay between wetting principles of superhydrophobic surfaces and microbial fouling for advanced three-dimensional (3D) biofabrication of biofilms. We utilize hydrostatic and capillary pressures to finely control the air-water interface and the aerotaxis-driven biofabrication on superhydrophobic surfaces. Superhydrophobic 3D molds are produced by a simple surface modification that partially embeds hydrophobic particles in silicone rubber. Thereafter, the molds allow the templating of the air-water interface of the culture medium, where the aerobic nanocellulose-producing bacteria (Komagataeibacter medellinensis) are incubated. The biofabricated replicas are hollow and seamless nanofibrous objects with a controlled morphology. Gradients of thickness, topographical feature size, and fiber orientation on the biofilm are obtained by controlling wetting, incubation time, and nutrient availability. Furthermore, we demonstrate that capillary length limitations are overcome by using pressurized closed molds, whereby a persistent air plastron allows the formation of 3D microstructures, regardless of their morphological complexity. We also demonstrate that interfacial biofabrication is maintained for at least 12 days without observable fouling of the mold surface. In summary, we achieve controlled biofouling of the air-water interface as imposed by the experimental framework under controlled wetting. The latter is central to both microorganism-based biofabrication and fouling, which are major factors connecting nanoscience, synthetic biology, and microbiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bacterial motility; capillary wetting; chemotaxis; fouling; living materials; nanofiber alignment; superhydrophobic surfaces

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33016698     DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c03999

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  2 in total

1.  Artificial neural network for cytocompatibility and antibacterial enhancement induced by femtosecond laser micro/nano structures.

Authors:  Libin Lu; Jiaru Zhang; Kai Guan; Jin Zhou; Fusong Yuan; Yingchun Guan
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2022-08-06       Impact factor: 9.429

2.  Highly Aligned Bacterial Nanocellulose Films Obtained During Static Biosynthesis in a Reproducible and Straightforward Approach.

Authors:  Nerea Murugarren; Soledad Roig-Sanchez; Irene Antón-Sales; Nanthilde Malandain; Kai Xu; Eduardo Solano; Juan Sebastian Reparaz; Anna Laromaine
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2022-07-21       Impact factor: 17.521

  2 in total

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