User‐Controlled 4D Biomaterial Degradation with Substrate‐Selective Sortase Transpeptidases for Single‐Cell Biology

Author:

Bretherton Ross C.123ORCID,Haack Amanda J.4ORCID,Kopyeva Irina2ORCID,Rahman Fariha12ORCID,Kern Jonah D.12ORCID,Bugg Darrian35ORCID,Theberge Ashleigh B.6ORCID,Davis Jennifer1235ORCID,DeForest Cole A.12478ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bioengineering University of Washington Seattle WA 98105 USA

2. Institute for Stem Cell & Regenerative Medicine University of Washington Seattle WA 98109 USA

3. Center for Cardiovascular Biology University of Washington Seattle WA 98109 USA

4. Department of Chemistry University of Washington Seattle WA 98105 USA

5. Department of Laboratory Medicine & Pathology University of Washington Seattle WA 98109 USA

6. Department of Urology University of Washington Seattle WA 98105 USA

7. Department of Chemical Engineering University of Washington Seattle WA 98105 USA

8. Molecular Engineering & Sciences Institute University of Washington Seattle WA 98109 USA

Abstract

AbstractStimuli‐responsive biomaterials show great promise for modeling disease dynamics ex vivo with spatiotemporal control over the cellular microenvironment. However, harvesting cells from such materials for downstream analysis without perturbing their state remains an outstanding challenge in 3/4‐dimensional (3D/4D) culture and tissue engineering. In this manuscript, a fully enzymatic strategy for hydrogel degradation that affords spatiotemporal control over cell release while maintaining cytocompatibility is introduced. Exploiting engineered variants of the sortase transpeptidase evolved to recognize and selectively cleave distinct peptide sequences largely absent from the mammalian proteome, many limitations implicit to state‐of‐the‐art methods to liberate cells from gels are sidestepped. It is demonstrated that evolved sortase exposure has minimal impact on the global transcriptome of primary mammalian cells and that proteolytic cleavage proceeds with high specificity; incorporation of substrate sequences within hydrogel crosslinkers permits rapid and selective cell recovery with high viability. In composite multimaterial hydrogels, it is shown that sequential degradation of hydrogel layers enables highly specific retrieval of single‐cell suspensions for phenotypic analysis. It is expected that the high bioorthogonality and substrate selectivity of the evolved sortases will lead to their broad adoption as an enzymatic material dissociation cue and that their multiplexed use will enable newfound studies in 4D cell culture.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation

Washington Space Grant Consortium

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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