Disordered protein-graphene oxide co-assembly and supramolecular biofabrication of functional fluidic devices

Author:

Wu YuanhaoORCID,Okesola Babatunde O.ORCID,Xu Jing,Korotkin Ivan,Berardo AliceORCID,Corridori IlariaORCID,di Brocchetti Francesco Luigi Pellerej,Kanczler Janos,Feng Jingyu,Li Weiqi,Shi YejiaoORCID,Farafonov VladimirORCID,Wang Yiqiang,Thompson Rebecca F.ORCID,Titirici Maria-MagdalenaORCID,Nerukh DmitryORCID,Karabasov Sergey,Oreffo Richard O. C.ORCID,Carlos Rodriguez-Cabello Jose,Vozzi GiovanniORCID,Azevedo Helena S.ORCID,Pugno Nicola M.ORCID,Wang Wen,Mata Alvaro

Abstract

AbstractSupramolecular chemistry offers an exciting opportunity to assemble materials with molecular precision. However, there remains an unmet need to turn molecular self-assembly into functional materials and devices. Harnessing the inherent properties of both disordered proteins and graphene oxide (GO), we report a disordered protein-GO co-assembling system that through a diffusion-reaction process and disorder-to-order transitions generates hierarchically organized materials that exhibit high stability and access to non-equilibrium on demand. We use experimental approaches and molecular dynamics simulations to describe the underlying molecular mechanism of formation and establish key rules for its design and regulation. Through rapid prototyping techniques, we demonstrate the system’s capacity to be controlled with spatio-temporal precision into well-defined capillary-like fluidic microstructures with a high level of biocompatibility and, importantly, the capacity to withstand flow. Our study presents an innovative approach to transform rational supramolecular design into functional engineering with potential widespread use in microfluidic systems and organ-on-a-chip platforms.

Funder

ERC Starting Grant (STROFUNSCAFF) The Marie Curie Integration Grant FP7-PEOPLE-2013-CIG (BIOMORPH) UK Regenerative Medicine Platform

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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