Protocell Flow Reactors for Enzyme and Whole-Cell Mediated Biocatalysis.
Huan MaXiayi LiuAngela H NobbsAnanya MishraAvinash J PatilStephen MannPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
The design and construction of continuous flow biochemical reactors comprising immobilized biocatalysts have generated great interest in the efficient synthesis of value-added chemicals. Living cells use compartmentalization and reaction-diffusion processes for spatiotemporal regulation of biocatalytic reactions, and implementing these strategies into continuous flow reactors can offer new opportunities in reactor design and application. Herein, the fabrication of protocell-based continuous flow reactors for enzyme and whole-cell mediated biocatalysis is demonstrated. Semipermeable membranized coacervate vesicles are employed as model protocells that spontaneously sequester enzymes or accumulate living bacteria to produce embodied microreactors capable of single- or multiple-step catalytic reactions. By packing millions of the enzyme/bacteria-containing coacervate vesicles in a glass column, a facile, cost-effective, and modular methodology capable of performing oxidoreductase, peroxidase and lipolytic reactions, enzyme-mediated L-DOPA synthesis, and whole-cell glycolysis under continuous flow conditions, is demonstrated. It is shown that the protocell-nested enzymes and bacterial cells exhibit enhanced activities and stability under deleterious operating conditions compared with their non-encapsulated counterparts. These results provide a step toward the engineering of continuous flow reactors based on cell-like microscale agents and offer opportunities in the development of green and sustainable industrial bioprocessing.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- cell therapy
- living cells
- anaerobic digestion
- stem cells
- fluorescent probe
- wastewater treatment
- induced apoptosis
- heavy metals
- single molecule
- oxidative stress
- nitric oxide
- quantum dots
- cell proliferation
- ionic liquid
- bone marrow
- hydrogen peroxide
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell cycle arrest
- crystal structure