Engineering motile artificial cells capable of swimming up concentration gradients

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: Chemistry

Abstract

Billions of years of evolution shaped cells into highly sophisticated micromachines, whose intricate network of molecular interactions are difficult to unravel. Bottom-up synthetic biology aims at constructing artificial cells by combining a small number of molecular agents into compartmentalised microenvironments. This reductionist approach enables the study of biological processes in a simplified setting. More importantly however, it offers the opportunity of producing smart cell-like agents to tackle pressing needs in diagnostics, therapeutics, biosynthesis, and bioremediation. Most attempts at engineering life-like 'behaviours' into artificial cells have focused on metabolism, energy generation, computation, and communication. One behaviour which has been neglected so far is motility: directed motion towards a target site. Motility (e.g. swimming and crawling) is a characteristic that is found across all life classes: from unicellular photosynthetic organisms that perform vertical migrations to optimise light exposure, swimming sperm cells, and macrophages that chase down pathogens. In most instances, cells are able to direct their motion following environmental cues, typically gradients in light intensity (phototaxis), temperature (thermotaxis), or the concentration of chemicals (chemotaxis). Despite the unquestionable benefits that controllable taxis would bring for most foreseen applications of artificial cells, viable technologies for engineering motion in synthetic cells have not been developed. This is because the protein assemblies needed to drive motility (e.g. flagella) are the most complex macromolecular structures in existence, and reconstituting them into synthetic systems is simply not possible using current state of the art. In this project we will develop a cellular bionics solution to this challenge: instead of using native cellular machineries, we will develop novel nanotechnologies based on DNA biophysics to propel a synthetic cell forwards, up a concentration gradient, with cell engineered to elicit a response (protein synthesis) when reaching its target site.

Planned Impact

Addressing UK skills demand: The most important impact of the CDT will be to train a new generation of Chemical Biology PhD graduates (~80) to be future leaders of enterprise, molecular technology innovation and translation for academia and industry. They will be able to embrace the life science's industrialisation thereby filling a vital skills gap in UK industry. These students will be able to bridge the divide between academia/industry and development/application across the physical/mathematical sciences and life sciences, as well as the human-machine interfaces. The technology programme of the CDT will empower our students as serial inventors, not reliant on commercial solutions.
CDT Network-Communication & Engagement: The CDT will shape the landscape by bringing together >160 research groups with leading players from industry, government, tech accelerators, SMEs and CDT affiliates. The CDT is pioneering new collaboration models, from co-located prototyping warehouses through to hackathons-these will redefine industry-academic collaborations and drive technology transfer.
UK plc: The technologies generated by the CDT will produce IP with potential for direct commercial exploitation and will also provide valuable information for healthcare and industry. They will redefine the state of the art with respect to the ability to make, measure, model and manipulate molecular interactions in biological systems across multiple length scales. Coupled with industry 4.0 approaches this will reduce the massive, spiralling cost of product development pipelines. These advances will help establish the molecular engineering rules underlying challenging scientific problems in the life sciences that are currently intractable. The technology advances and the corresponding insight in biology generated will be exploitable in industrial and medical applications, resulting in enhanced capabilities for end-users in biological research, biomarker discovery, diagnostics and drug discovery.
These advances will make a significant contribution to innovation in UK industry, with a 5-10 year timeframe for commercial realisation. e.g. These tools will facilitate the identification of illness in its early stages, minimising permanent damage (10 yrs) and reducing associated healthcare costs. In the context of drug discovery, the ability to fuse the power of AI with molecular technologies that provide insight into the molecular mechanisms of disease, target and biomarker validation and testing for side effects of candidates will radically transform productivity (5-10 yrs). Developments in automation and rapid prototyping will reduce the barrier to entry for new start-ups and turn biology into an information technology driven by data, computation and high-throughput robotics. Technologies such as integrated single cell analysis and label free molecular tracking will be exploitable for clinical diagnostics and drug discovery on shorter time scales (ca.3-5 yrs).
Entrepreneurship & Exploitation: Embedded within the CDT, the DISRUPT tech-accelerator programme will drive and support the creation of a new wave of student-led spin-out vehicles based on student-owned IP.
Wider Community: The outreach, responsible research and communication skill-set of our graduates will strengthen end-user engagement outside their PhD research fields and with the general public. Many technologies developed in the CDT will address societal challenges, and thus will generate significant public interest. Through new initiatives such as the Makerspace the CDT will spearhead new citizen science approaches where the public engage directly in CDT led research by taking part in e.g hackathons. Students will also engage with a wide spectrum of stakeholders, including policy makers, regulatory bodies and end-users. e.g. the Molecular Quarter will ensure the CDT can promote new regulatory frameworks that will promote quick customer and patient access to CDT led breakthroughs.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S023518/1 01/10/2019 31/03/2028
2452491 Studentship EP/S023518/1 03/10/2020 30/09/2023 Aileen Cooney