Programmable and printable Bacillus subtilis biofilms as engineered living materials

  • Jiaofang Huang
  • , Suying Liu
  • , Chen Zhang
  • , Xinyu Wang
  • , Jiahua Pu
  • , Fang Ba
  • , Shuai Xue
  • , Haifeng Ye
  • , Tianxin Zhao
  • , Ke Li
  • , Yanyi Wang
  • , Jicong Zhang
  • , Lihua Wang
  • , Chunhai Fan
  • , Timothy K. Lu
  • , Chao Zhong*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

267 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bacterial biofilms can be programmed to produce living materials with self-healing and evolvable functionalities. However, the wider use of artificial biofilms has been hindered by limitations on processability and functional protein secretion capacity. We describe a highly flexible and tunable living functional materials platform based on the TasA amyloid machinery of the bacterium Bacillus subtilis. We demonstrate that genetically programmable TasA fusion proteins harboring diverse functional proteins or domains can be secreted and can assemble into diverse extracellular nano-architectures with tunable physicochemical properties. Our engineered biofilms have the viscoelastic behaviors of hydrogels and can be precisely fabricated into microstructures having a diversity of three-dimensional (3D) shapes using 3D printing and microencapsulation techniques. Notably, these long-lasting and environmentally responsive fabricated living materials remain alive, self-regenerative, and functional. This new tunable platform offers previously unattainable properties for a variety of living functional materials having potential applications in biomaterials, biotechnology, and biomedicine.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)34-41
Number of pages8
JournalNature Chemical Biology
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2019

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