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. 2015 Jan 16;4(1):8-11.
doi: 10.1021/sb500113b.

Engineering living functional materials

Affiliations

Engineering living functional materials

Allen Y Chen et al. ACS Synth Biol. .

Abstract

Natural materials, such as bone, integrate living cells composed of organic molecules together with inorganic components. This enables combinations of functionalities, such as mechanical strength and the ability to regenerate and remodel, which are not present in existing synthetic materials. Taking a cue from nature, we propose that engineered 'living functional materials' and 'living materials synthesis platforms' that incorporate both living systems and inorganic components could transform the performance and the manufacturing of materials. As a proof-of-concept, we recently demonstrated that synthetic gene circuits in Escherichia coli enabled biofilms to be both a functional material in its own right and a materials-synthesis platform. To demonstrate the former, we engineered E. coli biofilms into a chemical-inducer-responsive electrical switch. To demonstrate the latter, we engineered E. coli biofilms to dynamically organize biotic-abiotic materials across multiple length scales, template gold nanorods, gold nanowires, and metal/semiconductor heterostructures, and synthesize semiconductor nanoparticles (Chen, A. Y. et al. (2014) Synthesis and patterning of tunable multiscale materials with engineered cells. Nat. Mater. 13, 515-523.). Thus, tools from synthetic biology, such as those for artificial gene regulation, can be used to engineer the spatiotemporal characteristics of living systems and to interface living systems with inorganic materials. Such hybrids can possess novel properties enabled by living cells while retaining desirable functionalities of inorganic systems. These systems, as living functional materials and as living materials foundries, would provide a radically different paradigm of materials performance and synthesis-materials possessing multifunctional, self-healing, adaptable, and evolvable properties that are created and organized in a distributed, bottom-up, autonomously assembled, and environmentally sustainable manner.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Foundational properties of living systems give rise to useful properties for materials function and synthesis. Integrating nonliving and living systems enables the creation of ‘living functional materials’.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Living materials-synthesis platform and living functional materials based on E. coli biofilms. This strategy is able to (a) pattern materials in response to external inputs, (b) organize materials autonomously via cell-to-cell communication, (c) pattern materials across multiple length scales, (d) interface with inorganic components to enable electrical conductivity and modulated fluorescence, and (e) implement a chemically responsive electrical switch based on biofilms.

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