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Synthesizing biomaterials in living organisms

Journal

CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2cs00999d

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Living organisms fabricate biomacromolecules such as DNA, RNA, and proteins through self-assembly, and understanding this process has led to exploration in synthesizing biomaterials within living organisms. In recent decades, these in vivo synthesized biomaterials have been extensively applied in cell-fate manipulation, disease theranostics, bioanalysis, cellular surface engineering, and tissue regeneration.
Living organisms fabricate biomacromolecules such as DNA, RNA, and proteins by the self-assembly process. The research on the mechanism of biomacromolecule formation also inspires the exploration of in vivo synthesized biomaterials. By elaborate design, artificial building blocks or precursors can self-assemble or polymerize into functional biomaterials within living organisms. In recent decades, these so-called in vivo synthesized biomaterials have achieved extensive applications in cell-fate manipulation, disease theranostics, bioanalysis, cellular surface engineering, and tissue regeneration. In this review, we classify strategies for in vivo synthesis into non-covalent, covalent, and genetic types. The development of these approaches is based on the chemical principles of supramolecular chemistry and synthetic chemistry, biological cues such as enzymes and microenvironments, and the means of synthetic biology. By summarizing the design principles in detail, some insights into the challenges and opportunities in this field are provided to enlighten further research. Synthesizing biomaterials from building blocks in living organisms.

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