Polymer Encapsulation of Bacterial Biosensors Enables Coculture with Mammalian Cells

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Abstract

Coexistence of different populations of cells and isolation of tasks can provide enhanced robustness and adaptability or impart new functionalities to a culture. However, generating stable cocultures involving cells with vastly different growth rates can be challenging. To address this, we developed living analytics in a multilayer polymer shell (LAMPS), an encapsulation method that facilitates the coculture of mammalian and bacterial cells. We leverage LAMPS to preprogram a separation of tasks within the coculture: growth and therapeutic protein production by the mammalian cells and l-lactate biosensing by Escherichia coli encapsulated within LAMPS. LAMPS enable the formation of a synthetic bacterial-mammalian cell interaction that enables a living biosensor to be integrated into a biomanufacturing process. Our work serves as a proof-of-concept for further applications in bioprocessing since LAMPS combine the simplicity and flexibility of a bacterial biosensor with a viable method to prevent runaway growth that would disturb mammalian cell physiology.

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Moya-Ramírez, I., Kotidis, P., Marbiah, M., Kim, J., Kontoravdi, C., & Polizzi, K. (2022). Polymer Encapsulation of Bacterial Biosensors Enables Coculture with Mammalian Cells. ACS Synthetic Biology, 11(3), 1303–1312. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.1c00577

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