Diatom-inspired multiscale mineralization of patterned protein–polysaccharide complex structures
Author(s) -
Ke Li,
Yingfeng Li,
Xinyu Wang,
Mengkui Cui,
Bolin An,
Jiahua Pu,
Jin-Tao Liu,
Boyang Zhang,
Guijun Ma,
Chao Zhong
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
national science review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.433
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 2095-5138
pISSN - 2053-714X
DOI - 10.1093/nsr/nwaa191
Subject(s) - biomineralization , biofabrication , template , nanotechnology , materials science , porosity , mineralization (soil science) , biomimetics , genetically engineered , chemistry , chemical engineering , tissue engineering , biology , gene , biochemistry , engineering , genetics , composite material , organic chemistry , nitrogen
Marine diatoms construct their hierarchically ordered, three-dimensional (3D) external structures called frustules through precise biomineralization processes. Recapitulating the remarkable architectures and functions of diatom frustules in artificial materials is a major challenge that has important technological implications for hierarchically ordered composites. Here, we report the construction of highly ordered, mineralized composites based on fabrication of complex self-supporting porous structures—made of genetically engineered amyloid fusion proteins and the natural polysaccharide chitin—and performing in situ multiscale protein-mediated mineralization with diverse inorganic materials, including SiO 2 , TiO 2 and Ga 2 O 3 . Subsequently, using sugar cubes as templates, we demonstrate that 3D fabricated porous structures can become colonized by engineered bacteria and can be functionalized with highly photoreactive minerals, thereby enabling co-localization of the photocatalytic units with a bacteria-based hydrogenase reaction for a successful semi-solid artificial photosynthesis system for hydrogen evolution. Our study thus highlights the power of coupling genetically engineered proteins and polysaccharides with biofabrication techniques to generate hierarchically organized mineralized porous structures inspired by nature.
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