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Enzyme-Enabled Droplet Biobattery for Powering Synthetic Tissues.

Juan LiuYujia QingLinna ZhouShaomeng ChenXuefei LiYujia ZhangHagan Bayley
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Enzyme-enabled biobatteries are promising green options to power the next-generation of bioelectronics and implantable medical devices. However, existing power sources based on enzymatic biofuel chemistry exhibit limited scale-down feasibility due to the solid and bulky battery structures. Therefore, miniature and soft alternatives are needed for integration with implants and tissues. Here, a biobattery built from nanolitre droplets, fuelled by the enzyme-enabled oxidation of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, generates electrical outputs and powers ion fluxes in droplet networks. Optimization of the droplet biobattery components ensures a stable output current of ~13,000 pA for over 24 h, representing a more than 600-fold increase in output over previous approaches, including light-driven processes. The enzyme-enabled droplet biobattery opens new avenues in bioelectronics and bioiontronics, exemplified by tasks such as the ability to drive chemical signal transmission in integrated synthetic tissues.
Keyphrases
  • high throughput
  • single cell
  • gene expression
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • drinking water
  • high resolution
  • nitric oxide
  • mass spectrometry
  • solid state