Living porous ceramics for bacteria-regulated gas sensing and carbon capture

Alessandro Dutto, Anton Kan, Zoubeir Saraw, Aline Maillard, Daniel Zindel, André R. Studart
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Abstract

Microorganisms hosted in abiotic structures have led to engineered living materials that can grow, sense and adapt in ways that mimic biological systems. Although porous structures should favor colonization by microorganisms, they have not yet been exploited as abiotic scaffolds for the development of living materials. Here, we report porous ceramics that are colonized by bacteria to form an engineered living material with self-regulated and genetically programmable carbon capture and gas-sensing functionalities. The carbon capture capability is achieved using wild-type photosynthetic cyanobacteria, whereas the gas-sensing function is generated utilizing genetically engineered E. coli. Hierarchical porous clay is used as ceramic scaffold and evaluated in terms of bacterial growth, water uptake and mechanical properties. Using state-of-the-art chemical analysis techniques, we demonstrate the ability of the living porous ceramics to capture CO2 directly from the air and to metabolically turn minute amounts of a toxic gas into a benign scent detectable by humans.
用于细菌调控气体传感和碳捕获的活多孔陶瓷
寄居在非生物结构中的微生物已经开发出了能够以模仿生物系统的方式生长、感知和适应的工程活体材料。虽然多孔结构应该有利于微生物的定殖,但它们尚未被用作开发活体材料的非生物支架。在这里,我们报告了由细菌定殖的多孔陶瓷,这种陶瓷形成了一种具有自我调节和基因编程的碳捕获和气体传感功能的工程活体材料。碳捕获能力是利用野生型光合蓝藻实现的,而气体传感功能则是利用基因工程大肠杆菌产生的。我们将分层多孔粘土用作陶瓷支架,并从细菌生长、吸水和机械性能等方面对其进行了评估。利用最先进的化学分析技术,我们展示了活体多孔陶瓷直接从空气中捕捉二氧化碳的能力,以及将微量有毒气体转化为人类可检测到的良性气味的能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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