Our research is aimed to creating life-like systems that are reminiscent of living cells, and to add new functionality to living cells in order to make hybrid cells.
Regarding the latter, we have succeeded in constructing nanosized polymer capsules, of which the membrane is composed of a biodegradable polymer building block. Due to the unique composition of the polymer, the membrane was semipermeable for small molecules. Enzymes entrapped in the capsule could therefore still convert their substrate, and the subsequent product could leave the nanoreactor. We have been able to introduce these nanoreactors in living cells, in which they operated as artificial organelles. The reactors were able to protect cells from patients against oxidative stress. This is a form of enzyme replacement therapy that would allow a much more efficient usage of the enzymes, as they can still perform their function in the cell while being protected against factors that normally degrade the enzymes quickly.
In our artificial cell research, we have developed a unique platform that can mimic both the cell’s cytosol as well as the cell’s membrane. Until now protocell systems that were developed could only mimic either one of the two aspects. With our system, we now have the ability to study biological processes in a microenvironment that is highly reminiscent of a eukaryotic cell. The platform has the same type of crowdedness as what proteins experience when they are positioned in a living cell’s cytoplasm. Furthermore, the membrane offers stability and protection, and at the same time allows the exchange of molecules with the outside environment. As a result, these artificial cells can communicate with each other.
One of the hallmarks of life is out-of-equilibrium behavior: systems need constant input to be pushed into a transient, active state. We have developed artificial organelles with this specific behavior. We have constructed polymer membranes of which the permeability could be temporarily switched from an open to a closed state either by pH or by biological components such as ATP. Because of intrinsic elements in the system the organelles were autonomously switched back to their original state. We could demonstrate this phenomenon for organelles that showed substrate conversion and also motility.