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Material-engineered bioartificial microorganisms enabling efficient scavenging of waterborne viruses.

Authors :
Li, Huixin
Xu, Yanpeng
Wang, Yang
Cui, Yihao
Lin, Jiake
Zhou, Yuemin
Tang, Shuling
Zhang, Ying
Hao, Haibin
Nie, Zihao
Wang, Xiaoyu
Tang, Ruikang
Source :
Nature Communications; 8/3/2023, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-13, 13p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Material-based tactics have attracted extensive attention in driving the functional evolution of organisms. In aiming to design steerable bioartificial organisms to scavenge pathogenic waterborne viruses, we engineer Paramecium caudatum (Para), single-celled microorganisms, with a semiartificial and specific virus-scavenging organelle (VSO). Fe<subscript>3</subscript>O<subscript>4</subscript> magnetic nanoparticles modified with a virus-capture antibody (MNPs@Ab) are integrated into the vacuoles of Para during feeding to produce VSOs, which persist inside Para without impairing their swimming ability. Compared with natural Para, which has no capture specificity and shows inefficient inactivation, the VSO-engineered Para (E-Para) specifically gathers waterborne viruses and confines them inside the VSOs, where the captured viruses are completely deactivated because the peroxidase-like nano-Fe<subscript>3</subscript>O<subscript>4</subscript> produces virus-killing hydroxyl radicals (•OH) within acidic environment of VSO. After treatment, magnetized E-Para is readily recycled and reused, avoiding further contamination. Materials-based artificial organelles convert natural Para into a living virus scavenger, facilitating waterborne virus clearance without extra energy consumption. The material-based evolution of organisms has attracted broad interdisciplinary interest, however, the fabrication of material-integrated organelles remains inadequately exploited. Here the authors engineer a bioartificial organism by integrating a semiartificial and specific virus-scavenging organelle to scavenge pathogenic waterborne viruses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169749454
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40397-5