Flow‐Induced Microfluidic Assembly for Advanced Biocatalysis Materials

Author:

Lemke Phillip1ORCID,Schneider Leonie1ORCID,Kunz Willfried23ORCID,Rieck Anna L.1ORCID,Jäger Paula S.1,Bruckmann Alexander1ORCID,Nestler Britta23ORCID,Rabe Kersten S.1ORCID,Niemeyer Christof M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Karlsruhe Institute for Technology (KIT) Institute for Biological Interfaces (IBG 1) Hermann‐von‐Helmholtz‐Platz 1 D‐76344 Eggenstein‐Leopoldshafen Germany

2. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) Institute for Applied Materials—Microstructure Modelling and Simulation Strasse am Forum 7 76131 Karlsruhe Germany

3. Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences Institute of Digital Materials Science Moltkestraße 30 76133 Karlsruhe Germany

Abstract

AbstractExploring the potential of microfluidic systems, this study presents a groundbreaking approach harnessing energy in microfluidic flows within a purpose‐built microreactor, enabling precise deposition of functional biomaterials. Upon optimizing reactor dimensions and integrating it into a microfluidic system, sequentially flow‐induced deposition of DNA hydrogels and transformation into DNA‐protein hybrid materials with SpyTag/SpyCatcher technology is investigated. However, limited functionalization rates restrict its viability for targeted biocatalytic processes. Therefore, the direct deposition of a phenolic acid decarboxylase is investigated, which is efficiently deposited but shows limited biocatalytic performance due to shear‐induced denaturation. This challenge is overcome by a two‐step immobilization process, resulting in microfluidic bioreactors demonstrating initial high space‐time yields of up to 7000 g L−1 d−1, but whose process stability proves unsatisfactory. However, by exploiting the principle of flow‐induced deposition to immobilize recombinant E. coli cells as functional living materials overexpressing biocatalytically relevant enzymes, bioreactors are produced that show equally high space‐time yields in continuous whole‐cell catalysis which remain constant over periods of up to 10 days. The insights gained offer optimization strategies for advanced functional materials and innovative reactor systems holding promise for applications in fundamental materials science, biosensing, and scalable production of microreactors for biocatalysis and bioremediation.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Electrochemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,Biomaterials,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials

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