Accelerating the design of pili-enabled living materials using an integrative technological workflow

Bacteria can be programmed to create engineered living materials (ELMs) with self-healing and evolvable functionalities. However, further development of ELMs is greatly hampered by the lack of engineerable nonpathogenic chassis and corresponding programmable endogenous biopolymers. Here, we describe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature chemical biology 2024-02, Vol.20 (2), p.201-210
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Yuanyuan, Wu, Yanfei, Hu, Han, Tong, Bangzhuo, Wang, Jie, Zhang, Siyu, Wang, Yanyi, Zhang, Jicong, Yin, Yue, Dai, Shengkun, Zhao, Wenjuan, An, Bolin, Pu, Jiahua, Wang, Yaomin, Peng, Chao, Li, Nan, Zhou, Jiahai, Tan, Yan, Zhong, Chao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bacteria can be programmed to create engineered living materials (ELMs) with self-healing and evolvable functionalities. However, further development of ELMs is greatly hampered by the lack of engineerable nonpathogenic chassis and corresponding programmable endogenous biopolymers. Here, we describe a technological workflow for facilitating ELMs design by rationally integrating bioinformatics, structural biology and synthetic biology technologies. We first develop bioinformatics software, termed Bacteria Biopolymer Sniffer (BBSniffer), that allows fast mining of biopolymers and biopolymer-producing bacteria of interest. As a proof-of-principle study, using existing pathogenic pilus as input, we identify the covalently linked pili (CLP) biosynthetic gene cluster in the industrial workhorse Corynebacterium glutamicum . Genetic manipulation and structural characterization reveal the molecular mechanism of the CLP assembly, ultimately enabling a type of programmable pili for ELM design. Finally, engineering of the CLP-enabled living materials transforms cellulosic biomass into lycopene by coupling the extracellular and intracellular bioconversion ability. A workflow integrating tools from bioinformatics, structural biology and synthetic biology has been developed that enables the rapid design of pili-enabled living materials. This approach allows mining of pili-producing nonpathogenic chassis, understanding of the pili structure and assembly, and engineering of pili-enabled living materials in a systematic and sequential manner.
ISSN:1552-4450
1552-4469
DOI:10.1038/s41589-023-01489-x