4.6 Article

Functionalizing Soft Matter for Molecular Communication

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 1, Issue 5, Pages 320-328

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ab500160e

Keywords

alginate; biofabrication; gelatin; molecular communication; quorum sensing

Funding

  1. Robert W. Deutsch Foundation
  2. National Science Foundation [CBET-1435957, NSF1160005, NSF1264509]
  3. USDA-National Institute of Food and Agriculture [20146702121585]
  4. Defense Threat Reduction Agency [HDTRA1-13-0037]
  5. Department of Defense

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The information age was enabled by advances in Molecular Molecular microfabrication and communication theory that allowed signal input signal output information to be processed by electrons and transmitted by electromagnetic radiation. Despite immense capabilities, micro-electronics has limited abilities to access and participate in the molecular-based communication that characterizes our biological world. Here, we use biological materials and methods to create components and fabricate devices to perform simple molecular communication functions based on bacterial quorum sensing (QS). Components were created by protein engineering to generate a multidomain fusion protein capable of sending a molecular QS signal, and by synthetic biology to engineer E. coli to receive and report this QS signal. The device matrix was formed using stimuli-responsive hydrogel-forming biopolymers (alginate and gelatin). Assembly of the components within the device matrix was achieved by physically entrapping the cell-based components, and covalently conjugating the protein-based components using the enzyme microbial transglutaminase. We demonstrate simple devices that can send or receive a molecular QS signal to/from the surrounding medium, and a two-component device in which one component generates the signal (i.e., issues a command) that is acted upon by the second component. These studies illustrate the broad potential of biofabrication to generate molecular communication devices.

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