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Physicochemical Characterization of Polymer‐Stabilized Coacervate Protocells
Author(s) -
Yewdall N. Amy,
Buddingh Bastiaan C.,
Altenburg Wiggert J.,
Timmermans Suzanne B. P. E.,
Vervoort Daan F. M.,
Abdelmohsen Loai K. E. A.,
Mason Alexander F.,
Hest Jan C. M.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
chembiochem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.05
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 1439-7633
pISSN - 1439-4227
DOI - 10.1002/cbic.201900195
Subject(s) - coacervate , protocell , polymer , macromolecule , chemistry , artificial cell , membrane , macromolecular crowding , biophysics , nanotechnology , materials science , chromatography , biochemistry , biology , organic chemistry
Abstract The bottom‐up construction of cell mimics has produced a range of membrane‐bound protocells that have been endowed with functionality and biochemical processes reminiscent of living systems. The contents of these compartments, however, experience semidilute conditions, whereas macromolecules in the cytosol exist in protein‐rich, crowded environments that affect their physicochemical properties, such as diffusion and catalytic activity. Recently, complex coacervates have emerged as attractive protocellular models because their condensed interiors would be expected to mimic this crowding better. Here we explore some relevant physicochemical properties of a recently developed polymer‐stabilized coacervate system, such as the diffusion of macromolecules in the condensed coacervate phase, relative to in dilute solutions, the buffering capacity of the core, the molecular organization of the polymer membrane, the permeability characteristics of this membrane towards a wide range of compounds, and the behavior of a simple enzymatic reaction. In addition, either the coacervate charge or the cargo charge is engineered to allow the selective loading of protein cargo into the coacervate protocells. Our in‐depth characterization has revealed that these polymer‐stabilized coacervate protocells have many desirable properties, thus making them attractive candidates for the investigation of biochemical processes in stable, controlled, tunable, and increasingly cell‐like environments.

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