open access publication

Article, 2024

Functional Amyloids: The Biomaterials of Tomorrow?

Advanced Materials, ISSN 0935-9648, Volume 36, 18, 10.1002/adma.202312823

Contributors

Pena-Diaz S. 0000-0002-2902-823X [1] Olsen W.P. 0000-0002-5603-8310 [1] Wang H. (Corresponding author) [2] Otzen D.E. 0000-0002-2918-8989 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aarhus University
  2. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] First Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi Medical University
  4. [NORA names: China; Asia, East]

Abstract

Functional amyloid (FAs), particularly the bacterial proteins CsgA and FapC, have many useful properties as biomaterials: high stability, efficient, and controllable formation of a single type of amyloid, easy availability as extracellular material in bacterial biofilm and flexible engineering to introduce new properties. CsgA in particular has already demonstrated its worth in hydrogels for stable gastrointestinal colonization and regenerative tissue engineering, cell-specific drug release, water-purification filters, and different biosensors. It also holds promise as catalytic amyloid; existing weak and unspecific activity can undoubtedly be improved by targeted engineering and benefit from the repetitive display of active sites on a surface. Unfortunately, FapC remains largely unexplored and no application is described so far. Since FapC shares many common features with CsgA, this opens the window to its development as a functional scaffold. The multiple imperfect repeats in CsgA and FapC form a platform to introduce novel properties, e.g., in connecting linkers of variable lengths. While exploitation of this potential is still at an early stage, particularly for FapC, a thorough understanding of their molecular properties will pave the way for multifunctional fibrils which can contribute toward solving many different societal challenges, ranging from CO fixation to hydrolysis of plastic nanoparticles.

Keywords

bacterial amyloid, bioplastic, biosensors, catalytic amyloid, hydrogels

Funders

  • Lundbeckfonden
  • National Facility for Translational Medicine (Shanghai)
  • Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China
  • Sino-Danish Center
  • Natural Science Foundation of Guangxi Province

Data Provider: Elsevier