Periodic Reporting for period 4 - MeSoMat (Metabolic soft matter with life-like properties)
Berichtszeitraum: 2022-12-01 bis 2024-05-31
The goal of the MESOMAT project is to endow soft materials with dynamic life-like properties. We have chosen four: molecular computation, movement, self-construction and the capacity to entertain complex chemical conversations with living cells. The underlying idea is embed stimuli-responsive materials with a biocompatible synthetic metabolism capable of sustaining autonomous chemical feedback loops that process information and perform autonomous macroscopic actions. The MESOMAT approach combines concepts from systems chemistry, synthetic biology and DNA molecular programming with soft materials and uses a biochemical system that we have contributed to pioneer: DNA/enzyme active solutions that remain out of equilibrium by consuming a chemical fuel with non-trivial reaction kinetics. This system has three unique properties: programmability, biocompatibility and a long-term metabolic autonomy.
Metabolic matter will be assembled in two stages: i) enabling metabolic materials with dynamic chemical, biological and mechanical responses, and ii) creating metabolic materials with unprecedented properties, in particular, the capacity of self-construction, which I will seek by emulating embryogenesis, and the ability to autonomously pattern a community of living cells. By doing this I will create for the first time chemical matter that is both dynamically and structurally complex, thus bringing into the realm of synthetic chemistry behaviours that so far only existed in biological systems. In the long term, metabolic matter could provide revolutionary solutions for soft robotics and tissue engineering.
MESOMAT has succeeded its main objectives. We have been able to combine out-of-equilibrium DNA molecular programs with molecular and cellular outputs, in particular with molecular motors and eukaryotic cells. We have also been able to implement chemo-mechanical and mechanochemical couplings in such materials, implementing synthetically behaviours that exist in living embryos. We have discovered a new class of structuration mechanism in active matter and we have use this knowledge to scaffold materials whose intrinsic dynamic complexity unfolds into structural complexity.
Concerning the second subject, we have first thoroughly investigated pattern formation in cytoskeletal active gels and demonstrated the importance of both passive and active forces in shaping active matter and demonstrate that a spontaneously flowing active fluid can be sculpted into a static material through an active mechanism (Senoussi et al, PNAS 2019, Sarfati et al, Soft Matter 2022). Then, we have coupled these active systems with DNA molecular programs making mechano-chemical (Senoussi et al, Sci. Adv. 2021) and chemo-mechanical (Vyborna et al, JACS 2021) couplings, inspired from embryo development. We have also theoretically investigated such chemo-mechanical coupling (Del Junco et al, Phys. Rev. E, 2022).
We have also worked on complex pattern formation with high spatial resolution where we have obtained and published good results (Urtel et al, Soft matter, 2019).
- First demonstration of Spatiotemporal Patterning of Living Cells with Extracellular DNA Programs (Van Der Hofstadt et al, ACS nano 2021).
- Experimental implementation of mechano-chemical (Senoussi et al, Sci. Adv. 2021) and chemo-mechanical (Vyborna et al, JACS 2021) couplings, inspired from embryo development.