Engineering the S‑Layer of Caulobacter
crescentus as a Foundation for Stable, High-Density, 2D Living
Materials
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Posted on 2019-01-07 - 20:48
Materials
synthesized by organisms, such as bones and wood, combine
the ability to self-repair with remarkable mechanical properties.
This multifunctionality arises from the presence of living cells within
the material and hierarchical assembly of different components across
nanometer to micron scales. While creating engineered analogues of
these natural materials is of growing interest, our ability to hierarchically
order materials using living cells largely relies on engineered 1D
protein filaments. Here, we lay the foundation for bottom-up assembly
of engineered living material composites in 2D along the cell body
using a synthetic biology approach. We engineer the paracrystalline
surface-layer (S-layer) of Caulobacter crescentus to display SpyTag peptides that form irreversible isopeptide bonds
to SpyCatcher-modified proteins, nanocrystals, and biopolymers on
the extracellular surface. Using flow cytometry and confocal microscopy,
we show that attachment of these materials to the cell surface is
uniform, specific, and covalent, and its density can be controlled
on the basis of the insertion location within the S-layer
protein, RsaA. Moreover, we leverage the irreversible nature of this
attachment to demonstrate via SDS-PAGE that the engineered
S-layer can display a high density of materials, reaching 1 attachment
site per 288 nm2. Finally, we show that ligation of quantum
dots to the cell surface does not impair cell viability, and this
composite material remains intact over a period of 2 weeks. Taken
together, this work provides a platform for self-organization of soft
and hard nanomaterials on a cell surface with precise control over
2D density, composition, and stability of the resulting composite,
and is a key step toward building hierarchically ordered engineered
living materials with emergent properties.
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Charrier, Marimikel; Li, Dong; Mann, Victor R.; Yun, Lisa; Jani, Sneha; Rad, Behzad; et al. (2019). Engineering the S‑Layer of Caulobacter
crescentus as a Foundation for Stable, High-Density, 2D Living
Materials. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.8b00448