Researchers at the Institute for
Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) have created the world's simplest artificial
cell capable of chemical navigation, migrating toward specific substances like
living cells do.
This breakthrough, published in Science Advances, demonstrates
how microscopic bubbles can be programmed to follow chemical trails. The study
describes the development of a "minimal cell" in the form of a
lipid vesicle encapsulating enzymes that can propel itself
through chemotaxis.
Cellular transport is a vital
aspect of many biological processes and a key milestone in evolution. Among all
types of movement, chemotaxis is an essential strategy used by many living
systems to move towards beneficial signals, such as nutrients, or away from
harmful ones.
"Bacteria rely on it to find
food, white blood cells use it to reach sites of infection, and even sperm cells navigate
toward the egg through chemotaxis," explains Bárbara Borges Fernandes, a
Ph.D. student in the Molecular Bionics group at IBEC, Professor at the Faculty
of Physics at the University of Barcelona, and the study's first author.
"What we find particularly
fascinating is that this type of directed movement can occur even without the
complex machinery typically involved, such as flagella or intricate signaling
pathways. By recreating it in a minimal synthetic system, we aim to uncover the
core principles that make such movement possible," she adds.
Being able to engineer an
artificial cell could help scientists better understand how cell units drive
further evolution into more complex structures.
"These synthetic cells are
like blueprints for nature's navigation system," says senior author
Professor Giuseppe Battaglia, ICREA Research Professor at IBEC, Principal
Investigator of the Molecular Bionics Group and leader of the study. "Build
simple, understand profoundly."
Liposomes and pores: Boats and engines
To achieve this, the research team
studied how cell-like vesicles move in gradients of two substrates: glucose and
urea. They enclosed glucose oxidase or urease enzymes within lipid-based
vesicles, called liposomes, to convert glucose and urea into their respective
end products.
The liposomes were then modified by
adding an essential membrane pore protein. This protein acts as a channel for
substrates to enter the synthetic cell and for the products of the reactions to
exit.
It is known that active motion
depends on breaking symmetry. By trapping the enzymes inside the particle and
utilizing the pores as the primary exchange points, a difference in chemical
concentration is generated around the particle. This causes fluid flow along the vesicle's surface and directs the
particle's movement. It is as if the liposome were a boat, and the pore and the
enzyme were its engine and navigation system.
From passive transport to active chemotaxis
The research team analyzed the
transport of over 10,000 vesicles inside microfluidic channels with glucose or
urease gradients to understand general population behavior. They studied the
trajectories of vesicles with varying numbers of pores and compared them with
those of control vesicles lacking pores.
"We observe that the control
vesicles move towards lower substrate concentrations due to passive effects
other than chemotaxis. As the number of pores in the vesicles increases, so
does the chemotactic component. Eventually, this reverses the direction of
movement, causing the vesicles to move towards areas with higher substrate
concentrations," Borges explains.
These
results are promising from a biochemical perspective because the elements
studied are ubiquitously present in the structure of a large majority of cells.
"Watch a vesicle move. Really watch
it. That tiny bubble holds secrets: how cells whisper to each other, how they
ship life's cargo. But biology's machinery is noisy, too many parts! So, we
cheat. We rebuild the whole dance with just three things: a fatty shell, one
enzyme, and a pore," says Battaglia.
"No fuss. Now the hidden rules jump
out. That's the power of synthetic biology: strip a puzzle down to its bones,
and suddenly you see the music in the mess. What once seemed tangled? Pure,
elegant chemistry, doing more with less."
The study was conducted in collaboration
with José Miguel Rubí's team at the University of Barcelona (UB), who made the
theoretical predictions.
The study also benefited from the involvement of the Institute for Physics of Living Systems and the Department of Chemistry at University College London, the University of Liverpool, the Biofisika Institute (CSIC-UPV/EHU) and the Ikerbasque Foundation for Science.
Source: Scientists create an artificial cell capable of navigating its environment using chemistry alone
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