Living material assembly of bacteriogenic protocells

Can Xu, Nicolas Martin, Mei Li*, Stephen Mann*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

161 Citations (Scopus)
1 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Advancing the spontaneous bottom-up construction of artificial cells with high organisational complexity and diverse functionality remains an unresolved issue at the interface between living and non-living matter. To address this challenge, a living material assembly process based on the capture and on-site processing of spatially segregated bacterial colonies within individual coacervate micro-droplets is developed for the endogenous construction of membrane-bounded, molecularly crowded, compositionally, structurally and morphologically complex synthetic cells. The bacteriogenic protocells inherit diverse biological components, exhibit multi-functional cytomimetic properties and can be endogenously remodelled to include a spatially partitioned DNA/histone nucleus-like condensate, membranized water vacuoles and a 3D network of F-actin proto-cytoskeletal filaments. The ensemble is biochemically energized by ATP production derived from implanted live E. coli cells to produce a cellular bionic system with amoeba-like external morphology and integrated life-like properties. Our results demonstrate a novel bacteriogenic strategy for the bottom-up construction of functional protoliving micro-devices and provide opportunities for the fabrication of new synthetic cell modules and augmented living/synthetic cell constructs with potential applications in engineered synthetic biology and biotechnology.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1029–1037
Number of pages9
JournalNature
Volume609
Early online date14 Sept 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Sept 2022

Research Groups and Themes

  • Max Planck Bristol
  • Bristol BioDesign Institute
  • Inorganic & Materials

Keywords

  • synthetic biology

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