| Literature DB >> 34934187 |
Wei Kang1, Jing Sun2, Runtao Zhu1, Baizhu Chen1,3, Yue Yu1, Aiguo Xia1, Mei Yu2, Meng Wang1, Jinyu Han1, Yixuan Chen1, Lijun Teng2, Qiong Tian2, Yin Yu1, Guanglin Li2, Lingchong You4, Zhiyuan Liu5, Zhuojun Dai6.
Abstract
The field of engineered living materials aims to construct functional materials with desirable properties of natural living systems. A recent study demonstrated the programmed self-assembly of bacterial populations by engineered adhesion. Here we use this strategy to engineer self-healing living materials with versatile functions. Bacteria displaying outer membrane-anchored nanobody-antigen pairs are cultured separately and, when mixed, adhere to each other to enable processing into functional materials, which we term living assembled material by bacterial adhesion (LAMBA). LAMBA is programmable and can be functionalized with extracellular moieties up to 545 amino acids. Notably, the adhesion between nanobody-antigen pairs in LAMBA leads to fast recovery under stretching or bending. By exploiting this feature, we fabricated wearable LAMBA sensors that can detect bioelectrical or biomechanical signals. Our work establishes a scalable approach to produce genetically editable and self-healable living functional materials that can be applied in biomanufacturing, bioremediation and soft bioelectronics assembly.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34934187 DOI: 10.1038/s41589-021-00934-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 16.174