Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials

Abstract Background Engineered living materials (ELMs) are an exciting new frontier, where living organisms create highly functional materials. In particular, protein ELMs have the advantage that their properties can be manipulated via simple molecular biology. Caf1 is a protein ELM that is especial...

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Main Authors: Daniel T. Peters, Helen Waller, Mark A. Birch, Jeremy H. Lakey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:Journal of Biological Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13036-019-0183-2
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spelling doaj-91e3850c6ad94c299085ffbeadb307202020-11-25T02:59:13ZengBMCJournal of Biological Engineering1754-16112019-06-0113111410.1186/s13036-019-0183-2Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterialsDaniel T. Peters0Helen Waller1Mark A. Birch2Jeremy H. Lakey3Institute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, Medical School, Newcastle UniversityInstitute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, Medical School, Newcastle UniversityDivision of Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of CambridgeInstitute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, Medical School, Newcastle UniversityAbstract Background Engineered living materials (ELMs) are an exciting new frontier, where living organisms create highly functional materials. In particular, protein ELMs have the advantage that their properties can be manipulated via simple molecular biology. Caf1 is a protein ELM that is especially attractive as a biomaterial on account of its unique combination of properties: bacterial cells export it as a massive, modular, non-covalent polymer which is resistant to thermal and chemical degradation and free from animal material. Moreover, it is biologically inert, allowing the bioactivity of each 15 kDa monomeric Caf1 subunit to be specifically engineered by mutagenesis and co-expressed in the same Escherichia coli cell to produce a mixture of bioactive Caf1 subunits. Results Here, we show by gel electrophoresis and transmission electron microscopy that the bacterial cells combine these subunits into true mosaic heteropolymers. By combining two separate bioactive motifs in a single mosaic polymer we demonstrate its utility by stimulating the early stages of bone formation by primary human bone marrow stromal cells. Finally, using a synthetic biology approach, we engineer a mosaic of three components, demonstrating that Caf1 complexity depends solely upon the variety of monomers available. Conclusions These results demonstrate the utility of engineered Caf1 mosaic polymers as a simple route towards the production of multifunctional biomaterials that will be useful in biomedical applications such as 3D tissue culture and wound healing. Additionally, in situ Caf1 producing cells could create complex bacterial communities for biotechnology. Graphical abstracthttp://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13036-019-0183-2BiomaterialsProtein engineeringTissue scaffoldsSynthetic biologyBoneElectron microscopy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel T. Peters
Helen Waller
Mark A. Birch
Jeremy H. Lakey
spellingShingle Daniel T. Peters
Helen Waller
Mark A. Birch
Jeremy H. Lakey
Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials
Journal of Biological Engineering
Biomaterials
Protein engineering
Tissue scaffolds
Synthetic biology
Bone
Electron microscopy
author_facet Daniel T. Peters
Helen Waller
Mark A. Birch
Jeremy H. Lakey
author_sort Daniel T. Peters
title Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials
title_short Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials
title_full Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials
title_fullStr Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials
title_full_unstemmed Engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials
title_sort engineered mosaic protein polymers; a simple route to multifunctional biomaterials
publisher BMC
series Journal of Biological Engineering
issn 1754-1611
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background Engineered living materials (ELMs) are an exciting new frontier, where living organisms create highly functional materials. In particular, protein ELMs have the advantage that their properties can be manipulated via simple molecular biology. Caf1 is a protein ELM that is especially attractive as a biomaterial on account of its unique combination of properties: bacterial cells export it as a massive, modular, non-covalent polymer which is resistant to thermal and chemical degradation and free from animal material. Moreover, it is biologically inert, allowing the bioactivity of each 15 kDa monomeric Caf1 subunit to be specifically engineered by mutagenesis and co-expressed in the same Escherichia coli cell to produce a mixture of bioactive Caf1 subunits. Results Here, we show by gel electrophoresis and transmission electron microscopy that the bacterial cells combine these subunits into true mosaic heteropolymers. By combining two separate bioactive motifs in a single mosaic polymer we demonstrate its utility by stimulating the early stages of bone formation by primary human bone marrow stromal cells. Finally, using a synthetic biology approach, we engineer a mosaic of three components, demonstrating that Caf1 complexity depends solely upon the variety of monomers available. Conclusions These results demonstrate the utility of engineered Caf1 mosaic polymers as a simple route towards the production of multifunctional biomaterials that will be useful in biomedical applications such as 3D tissue culture and wound healing. Additionally, in situ Caf1 producing cells could create complex bacterial communities for biotechnology. Graphical abstract
topic Biomaterials
Protein engineering
Tissue scaffolds
Synthetic biology
Bone
Electron microscopy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13036-019-0183-2
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AT jeremyhlakey engineeredmosaicproteinpolymersasimpleroutetomultifunctionalbiomaterials
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