Catalytic materials enabled by a programmable assembly of synthetic polymers and engineered bacterial spores

19 May 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Natural biological materials are formed by self-assembly processes and catalyze a myriad of reactions. Here, we report a programmable molecular assembly of designed synthetic polymers with engineered bacterial spores. This self-assembly process is driven by dynamic covalent bond formation on spore surface glycan and yields macroscopic materials that are structurally stable, self-healing, and recyclable. Molecular programming of polymer species shapes the physical properties of these materials while metabolically dormant spores allow for prolonged ambient storage. Incorporation of spores with genetically encoded functionalities enables operationally simple and repeated enzymatic catalysis. Our work lays an important foundation for scalable and programmable synthesis of robust materials for sustainable biocatalysis.

Keywords

polymer
biocatalysis
hydrogel
living material
sustainability
spores
dynamic covalent

Supplementary materials

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Catalytic materials enabled by a programmable assembly of synthetic polymers and engineered bacterial spores
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