Pu
Zhang‡
ac,
Amit
Fischer‡
a,
Yu
Ouyang
a,
Jianbang
Wang
a,
Yang Sung
Sohn
b,
Ola
Karmi
b,
Rachel
Nechushtai
b and
Itamar
Willner
*a
aInstitute of Chemistry, Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel. E-mail: itamar.willner@mail.huji.ac.il
bInstitute of Life Science, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel
cKey Laboratory of Luminescence and Real-Time Analytical Chemistry (Southwest University), Ministry of Education, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715, People's Republic of China
First published on 29th April 2022
Biomolecule-loaded nucleic acid-functionalized carboxymethyl cellulose hydrogel-stabilized microcapsules (diameter ca. 2 μm) are introduced as cell-like containments. The microcapsules are loaded with two DNA tetrahedra, T1 and T2, functionalized with guanosine-rich G-quadruplex subunits, and/or with native enzymes (glucose oxidase, GOx, and/or β-galactosidase, β-gal). In the presence of K+-ions and hemin, the T1/T2 tetrahedra constituents, loaded in the microcapsules, assemble into a hemin/G-quadruplex bridged tetrahedra dimer DNAzyme catalyzing the oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin by generating H2O2. In the presence of co-loaded GOx or GOx/β-gal, the GOx//T1/T2 hemin/G-quadruplex cascade catalyzing the glucose-mediated oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin, and the three-biocatalysts cascade consisting of β-gal//GOx//hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 catalyzing the lactose-driven oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin proceed in the microcapsules. Enhanced biocatalytic transformations in the microcapsules, as compared to the performance of the reactions in a homogeneous phase, are observed, due to the proximity of the biocatalysts in a confined volume. As the synthetic methodology to prepare the microcapsules yields boundaries functionalized with complementary nucleic acid tethers, the dynamic association of different microcapsules, loaded selectively with biomolecular catalysts, proceeds. The dynamic dimerization of GOx-loaded microcapsules and hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 DNAzyme-loaded microcapsules yields effective intercommunicated microcapsules driving the GOx//hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 DNAzyme cascade. In addition, the dynamic dimerization of GOx-loaded microcapsules with β-gal//hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2-loaded microcapsules enables the bi-directional intercommunicated operation of the lactose-stimulated three catalysts β-gal//GOx//hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 DNAzyme cascade. The guided separation and formation of dynamic supramolecular dimer microcapsular containments, and the dictated switchable operation of intercommunicated biocatalytic cascades are demonstrated.
The design of organized biocatalytic cascades on supramolecular scaffolds or biocatalytic cascades operating in confined micro- or nano-environments attracts substantial research efforts aiming to emulate bicatalytic networks in nature.3 The spatial proximity between the enzymes in these organized media leads to effective channeling of the product of one enzyme, acting as substrate for the neighboring enzyme, thereby, overcoming diffusional limitations and producing high local concentrations for effective intercommunication between the biocatalysts.4 For example, the assembly of spatially organized enzymes on DNA frameworks, such as strips,5 bundles6 or origami tiles7 or the organization of enzymes, on peptide ligands8 or protein scaffolds9 led to structurally ordered assemblies guiding efficient biocatalytic cascades. Similarly, the integration of multi-enzyme systems in confined environments such as microdroplets,10 polymersomes,11 or metal–organic-framework nanoparticles12 generated engineered containments of spatially proximate assemblies of biocatalysts for efficient operation of biocatalytic cascades. Such organized assemblies of biocatalytically active cascades were suggested as functional systems for effective sensing,13 bioreactors for driving efficient catalytic transformations and the synthesis of drugs.14
Different cell-like containments were developed including liposomes,15 polymersomes,16 proteinosomes,17 colloidosomes,18 dendrosomes,19 coacervate microdroplets,20 and were suggested as models for cells compartments. Enzymes were integrated in cell-like containments and the advantages of driving biocatalytic cascades in confined nano/micro-environments were demonstrated.21 Cell-like containments demonstrating motility,22 chemical signaling23 proliferation,24 and passive and active transport25 were reported. Genetic circuits26 and RNA catalytic networks were embedded in cell-like containments27 and DNA-guided communication between cell-like containments28 and gene expression29 were realized. Compartmentalization of cell-like containments and control over cascaded reactions in the compartmentalized assemblies were achieved.30 Also, adaptive temporal pH-responsive polymersome nanoreactor structures31 or transient chemical fuel-triggered microgel systems32 were reported, and compartmentalization of native cells was emulated by cell-like containment model systems and these revealed increased functional complexity,33 and control over cascaded reactions.34
The information encoded in the base sequence of nucleic acids provides structural and functional feature that could be utilized to design active constituents in artificial cells. For example, the base paring guided formation of duplex DNAs provides means to construct programmed duplex structures that can be dynamically interchanged by strand displacement processes controlled by the relative stabilities of the duplexes.35 In addition, sequence dictated dynamic reconfiguration of nucleic acid strands provides versatile means to develop switchable DNA structures, e.g. G-quadruplexes,36 triplexes37 or i-motif assemblies,38 and pre-designed nucleic acid structures, such as hairpin DNAs, or circular DNAs, introduced functional motives to operate dynamic DNA machineries, such as the hybridization chain reaction39 or the rolling circle amplification.40 Moreover, the sequence specific-nucleic acid constructs reveal selective recognition properties (aptamers)41 or catalytic properties (DNAzymes or nucleozymes),42 such as the hemin/G-quadruplex, horseradish peroxidase mimicking DNAzyme43 or the metal-ion-cofactor dependent DNAzymes.44 The nucleic acid biopolymers could substitute proteins or native enzymes, or alternatively be coupled to native enzymes, as functional constituents in artificial cells. Furthermore, the guided hybridization properties of nucleic acids led to the supramolecular assembly of 2D and 3D DNA structures, such as Y-shaped,45 crossover-junctions46 or origami frameworks.47 Within this context, DNA tetrahedra 3D nanostructures revealing tunable sizes and high stabilities attract substantial recent research efforts.48 The DNA tetrahedra nanostructures are formed upon the assembly of four appropriately sequence-engineered strands,49 and reveal size tunability50 and structural stability.51 By the conjugation of nucleic acid tethers to the corners of the tetrahedra or by encoding sequence specific domains into the edges of the tetrahedra structures, the functionalization of the nanostructures with nanoparticles,52 proteins53 and functional nucleic acids (DNAzymes, aptamers)54 were demonstrated. Various applications of DNA tetrahedra for sensing,55 imaging,56 drug carrying,57 and scaffolds for the organization of chiroplasmonic structures58 were reported. The dimensions of the DNA tetrahedra, 2.4–12.6 nm, are controlled by the length of the strands comprising the structures. As the dimensions of DNA tetrahedra are comparable to the sizes of low-molecular-weight proteins, they were suggested as structural modules that emulate proteins.59
In the present study, we introduce DNA-based hydrogel microcapsules as model systems for cell-like containments. The synthesis of DNA-based microcapsules and particularly the preparation of stimuli-responsive drug-loaded microcapsules has been a subject of extensive research in our laboratory.60 We have demonstrated the design of pH,61 aptamer,62 light63 and microRNA responsive64 microcapsules and applied the systems for programmed release of anti-cancer drugs or insulin.65 The study will make use of the following properties of the microcapsules to introduce the cell mimicking functions: (i) The method to prepare the microcapsules allows the programmed loading of the containment with pre-designed constituents. (ii) The methodology to synthesize the microcapsule introduces surface functionalities that allow the dynamic intercommunication between microcapsules. (iii) The hydrogel coating membrane reveals cell-like permeation and efflux properties. The resulting DNA crosslinked hydrogel coating reveals in/out permeation and efflux of low molecular weight agents, ca. < 5 kDa,65 yet higher molecular weight substance is non-permeable acrossing the membrane boundaries and reveal confined stabilities for at least three days. These properties enable the control over the catalytic transformations within the microcapsules. (iv) The introduction of catalytic DNA tetrahedra nanostructures and native enzyme into the microcapsule containments will be presented. The intracapsular DNA tetrahedra/enzyme cascades and the dynamic intercommunication of microcapsules loaded with catalytic tetrahedra/enzyme constituents and the guided operation of catalytic cascades will be introduced. (v) The advantages of dynamic intercommunication of cell-like assemblies driving biocatalytic cascades over analog biocatalytic cascades in aqueous environments are presented.
For the characterization of the loaded microcapsules, we performed a series of background experiments: (i) We loaded the microcapsules with the Cy5-labeled tetrahedra T1 and non-labeled T2, Fig. 1(B), and probed the confinement of the tetrahedra to microcapsule containment. Fig. 1(B), panel I, depicts the SEM image of the Cy5-labeled tetrahedra T1-loaded microparticles, and the confocal fluorescence microscopy images of the resulting hydrogel-coated Cy5-modified T1 loaded microparticles before etching, panel II, and of the Cy5-modified T1-loaded microcapsules after etching, panel III. Microcapsules revealing an average diameter corresponding to 2–3 μm are formed. (ii) To validate the intact structure of the tetrahedra loads in microcapsular containment after the synthesis and etching of the core CaCO3 microcapsules, we performed a control experiment where the CaCO3 particle were impregnated with the T1-tetrahedra and subsequently etched with EDTA, at similar condition used for the preparation of the microcapsules. The resulting solution containing the tetrahedra was analyzed by electrophoresis and compared to a standard tetrahedra solution. The result and accompanying discussion are presented in Fig. S1.† Pure, intact tetrahedra structure were observed suggesting that the subsequent etching of the core CaCO3 have no perturbing effect on the tetrahedra nanostructures. (For further characterization of the tetrahedra structures by electrophoretic separation, see ESI, Fig. S2,† and the characterization of the monomer tetrahedra or dimer tetrahedra nanostructures by atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging, see ESI, Fig. S3†). (iii) The resulting tetrahedra-loaded microcapsules are stable for at least three days, Fig. S4.† No leakage of the tetrahedra from the microcapsule containments could be detected within this time-interval. (iv) The loading of the tetrahedra T1 and T2 in the microcapsules was evaluated to be 0.1 μM and 0.09 μM, respectively, by separate labeling T1 with Cy5 and T2 with Cy3 in the loaded mixture of T1/T2 and by using appropriate calibration curves of Cy5-labeled T1 and Cy3-labeled T2 (For details, see ESI Fig. S5†). (v) The two tetrahedra structures, T1/T2, were loaded in the microcapsular containments, treated with K+-ions, in presence of hemin as cofactor, to probe the formation of the hemin/G-quadruplex crosslinked tetrahedra dimer structure and its catalytic activity to stimulate the catalyzed oxidation of Amplex Red to the fluorescent Resorufin product, Fig. 1(C). The results in Fig. 1(D), panel I demonstrate the permeation of K+-ions and hemin into the T1/T2 loaded microcapsules, and the formation of the hemin/G-quadruplex DNAzyme in the presence of Amplex Red and H2O2, results in the activation of the hemin/G-quadruplex DNAzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin. Furthermore, Fig. 1(D), panel II, demonstrates that upon the subsequent permeation of 18-crown-6-ether, CE, into the microcapsule containment, the hemin/G-quadruplex can be separated and its catalytic activity is switched off, and by the cyclic permeation of K+-ions/CE into the microcapsules, the DNAzyme activity can be reversibly switched between “ON” and “OFF” states. (For further characterization of the switchable formation and dissociation of the G-quadruplex-bridged tetrahedra dimer, using a fluorescent Zn(II)-protoporphyrin IX, Zn(II)-PPIX, fluorescent label, see Fig. S6–S8,† and accompanying discussion). (vi) In addition, we applied the procedure outline in Fig. 1(A) to load different enzymes into the microcapsule containments. (e.g., glucose oxidase, GOx, and/or β-galactosidase, β-gal). By labeling of the enzymes with appropriate fluorophores, the fluorophore-functionalized enzyme-loaded microcapsules allow the fluorescence imaging of the resulting biocatalytic capsules. For example, Fig. 1(E) depicts the resulting coumarin-modified glucose oxidase (GOx)-loaded microparticles and the confocal fluorescence microscopy image of the microcapsules. Using an appropriate calibration curve relating the fluorescence intensities to the concentration of the modified enzyme and knowing the number of microcapsules, the loading of the labeled enzyme in the microcapsules is evaluated. (For the specific system, a loading corresponding to 0.026 nM coumarin-labeled GOx per microcapsule was evaluated). Furthermore, by the integration of a non-modified enzyme in the microcapsules, and assuming a similar loading degree to that of the labeled enzymes, and the activity of the enzyme entrapped in the microcapsules was followed, thus allowing the evaluation of the respective enzyme activity after the preparation and etching of the microcapsules. Along the study, mixtures of the catalytic DNA tetrahedra and the respective enzymes will be integrated in the microcapsular containments to stimulate catalytic cascade and intercommunicated catalytic cascades. The methods described above will be used to characterize different assemblies.
The first system to be addressed is displayed in Fig. 2. The two tetrahedra T1/T2 and GOx were loaded in the microcapsules. The loading of T1/T2 and GOx in the microcapsules were evaluated by the alternate loading of the capsules with mixtures that include the fluorophore Cy5-labeled T1, Cy5-labeled T2, and coumarine-labeled GOx to be 0.063 μM, 0.07 μM and 0.12 μM, respectively. (The calibration curve of coumarin-labeled GOx is shown in Fig. S9†). Treatment of the T1/T2 and GOx-loaded microcapsules with K+-ions and hemin resulted in the formation of the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 DNAzyme in the capsules. The subsequent treatment of the capsules with glucose and Amplex Red resulted in the intracapsular operation of the GOx//hemin/G-quadruplex cascade where GOx catalyzed the aerobic oxidation of glucose to gluconic acid and H2O2, and the resulting H2O2 mediated the hemin/G-quadruplex catalyzed oxidation of Amplex Red to the fluorescent product Resorufin. The biocatalytic cascade was probed by following the time-dependent formation of Resorufin in the microcapsules, Fig. 2(B), curve (i). Fig. 2(B), curve (ii), shows the time-dependent fluorescence intensities of the same system upon excluding K+-ions. No fluorescence changes are observed indicating that the K+-ions stabilized formation of the hemin/G-quadruplex DNAzyme is essential for operating the DNAzyme cascade in the microcapsules. Fig. S10† shows the fluorescence spectra of Resorufin at different time-intervals upon treatment of the cell-like microcapsules with different concentrations of glucose. As the concentration of glucose increases, the biocatalytic cascade is intensified. In addition, the progress of the biocatalytic cascade in the microcapsular heterogeneous system was compared to the operation of the bicatalysts hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 and GOx in a homogeneous buffer solution that included the catalysts at bulk concentrations identical to the concentrations of the catalysts in the microcapsules. (All other constituents, e.g. K+-ions, hemin, Amplex Red and glucose were identical to those present in the microcapsular system). Fig. 2(C), curve (ii), presents the time-dependent formation of Resorufin in the homogeneous buffer solution, in comparison to the formation of Resorufin in the microcapsular system, curve (i). The biocatalytic cascade in the microcapsular system is 6-fold enhanced as compared to the homogeneous system. This is attributed to generation of the bicatalyst cascade in the confined volume of the microcapsules. That is, the GOx-biocatalyzed formation of H2O2 in spatial proximity to the hemin/G-quadruplex DNAzyme that leads to the effective oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin as a result of effective channeling of H2O2 to the hemin/G-quadruplex DNAzyme. Similar rate enhancement of bicatalysts cascades in confined microenvironments were previously demonstrated,3 for example, by the spatial proximate organization of two enzymes on DNA templates,5,6 DNA origami structures,7 microdroplets10 or other cell-like containments.11 The confinement effect of the microcapsules on enhancing biocatalytic cascades was further demonstrated in a three biocatalyst-loaded microcapsule containment assembly. In this system, the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 horseradish peroxidase mimicking DNAzyme was coupled to GOx and β-galactosidase, β-gal, using lactose as the parent substrate. In this system, Fig. S11† (A), β-gal hydrolyses lactose to glucose and galactose, the resulting glucose is aerobically oxidized gluconic acid and H2O2, and the resulting H2O2 acts as intracapsular oxidant for the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 DNAzyme-catalyzed oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin. The characterization of this three biocatalysts-loaded microcapsule system and the results corresponding to the operation of the three catalysts are presented and discussed in detail in Fig. S12–S15.† As for the two-catalysts-loaded microcapsule system, we find that the three biocatalysts-loaded microcapsules reveal a 5-fold rate enhancement, as compared to the three catalysts cascade in a homogeneous buffer phase, due to the operation of the cascaded catalysis in the confined microenvironment of the microcapsule.
The introduction of DNA-based hydrogel microcapsules as cell-like containments, allows, however, the use of the microcapsules as functional units to establish intercommunication between the microcapsules, while the discussion till now addressed the loading and catalytic cascade in the microcapsule containments, the method fabricating the microcapsules provides structural features that eventually allow the design of intercommunicating microcapsules. The cross-opening hairpins H1 and H2 associated with the polymer chains P1 and P2 leads to a duplex-bridged hydrogel boundary that stabilizes the microcapsules. The synthesized hydrogel matrices yield, however, microcapsules that contain non-hybridized free, self-complementary tethers of H1 and H2 at the microcapsule membrane boundaries. Albeit, the surface coverage of these tethers is low, the tethers could provide important means to intercommunicate between microcapsules that include different loads. This is schematically outlined in Fig. 3, where two hydrogel microcapsules M1 and M2 potentially, loaded with different loads are interacted. The tethers p, q, exhibiting half complementarity represent segment of the H1 and H2 opened hairpin tethers, and thus dynamic supramolecular dimerization (or eventually enhanced oligomerization) may proceed to yield M1 and M2 monomers and M1 and M2 microcapsular dimers. The spatial proximity between the microcapsules M1/M2, and the permeability of the microcapsular boundaries to low-molecular-weight agents might allow effective transport across the boundaries from microcapsules M1 and M2 or from M2 to M1 without diffusion to the bulk medium. Such mechanism could, then, provide the basis for the intercommunication biocatalytic processes occurring in neighboring microcapsules.
Accordingly, a mixture of two microcapsules M1, loaded with GOx (loading content of 0.12 μM), and microcapsules M2 that were loaded with the K+-ions-stabilized hemin/G-quadruplex-bridged tetrahedra T1/T2 (loading content of 0.1 μM) was subjected to glucose, with the attempt to drive the intercommunicated biocatalytic cascade in the presence of Amplex Red, Fig. 4(A). The inter-microcapsule biocatalytic cascade proceeds effectively, Fig. 4(B), curve (i), where the aerobic oxidation of glucose in microcapsule M1 yields H2O2 that diffuses through the microcapsules into the spatially proximate microcapsule M2, where the hemin/G-quadruplex catalyzed oxidation of Amplex Red to the fluorescent Resorufin proceeds. The effectiveness of the inter-microcapsule cascade is controlled by presence of K+-ions. Fig. 4(B), curve (ii), shows the cascaded catalysis of the intercommunicated M1/M2 microcapsules in the absence of K+-ions. Upon addition of CE to the K+-ions containing M1/M2 microcapsule mixture, the cascaded catalysis was inhibited due to the separation of the hemin/G-quadruplex-bridged tetrahedra T1/T2, Fig. 4(B), curve (iii). The effectiveness of the inter-microcapsule cascade is, also, controlled by the concentration of glucose, Fig. S16† shows the fluorescence spectra of Resorufin at different time-intervals upon treatment the microcapsules with different concentrations of glucose. Control experiments revealed that no leakage of the microcapsules constituents into the bulk solution occurred, as evidenced by precipitation of the microcapsules mixture (after three days) and subjecting the solution to K+-ions, glucose, hemin and Amplex Red (Fig. S17,† curve (i)). No Resorufin could be detected in the bulk solution, implying that no leakage of the constituents from the microcapsules occurred (Fig. S17,† curve (ii)). Therefore, the loaded microcapsules M1, M2 mixture retained their intact compositions and activities after a time-interval of three days. For further experiments demonstrating that the biocatalytic cascade originates from intimate contact between the microcapsules M1/M2, vide infra. Fig. 4(C) curve (ii) depicts the rate of oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin by a homogeneous mixture of GOx and the hemin/G-quadruplex tetrahedra, at similar concentrations present in the microcapsular microcapsules, upon subjecting to the biocatalysts glucose 30 mM, as compared to the biocatalytic cascade in the microcapsular system, Fig. 4(C), curve (i). Evidently, the biocatalytic cascade driven by the inter-communicating microcapsules is 5-fold enhanced as compared to homogeneous mixture of biocatalytic constituents.
To further support the spatial intercommunication of the microcapsules through the dynamic interlinking of the microcapsules, a set of complementary experiments was performed. A mixture of coumarin-labeled GOx loaded microcapsules, 20 μL (ca. 4500 microcapsules per μL) and microcapsules loaded with Cy5-labeled T1 and T2, 20 μL (ca. 4500 microcapsules per μL) were allowed to equilibrate. The mixture was subjected to confocal fluorescence imaging to probe the presence of monomer microcapsules loaded with coumarin-labeled GOx (blue fluorescence), monomer Cy5-T1/T2-loaded microcapsules (red fluorescence), and dimer microcapsules consisting of dimer coumarin-labeled GOx microcapsules (blue–blue), dimer Cy5-T1/T2-loaded microcapsules (red–red) and mixed coumarin-loaded microcapsules and Cy5-T1/T2-loaded microcapsules (blue–red). Fig. 5(A) exemplifies images of the respective microcapsules. By analyzing ten different fluorescent domains of three different mixture samples (total 30 field frames), the respective monomer and dimer constituent were counted, and the average contents of the respective constituents were evaluated and presented in Fig. 5(B). The mixture includes ca. 51% monomer microcapsules and 37% dimer microcapsules and 12% of non-defined structures. The importance of this experiment is the demonstration of monomer and dimer microcapsules and the quantitative evaluation of the different constituents in the microcapsules mixture. Analog experiments were performed on the respective coumarin-labeled GOx-loaded microcapsules only, and on the Cy5-T1/T2-loaded microcapsules only, and these are presented in the ESI† (For quantitative evaluation of the monomer/dimer mixture, see Fig. S18 and S19† and accompanying discussion).
To further support the equilibrated monomers/dimers composition in the mixture, fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) experiments were performed, Fig. S20,† and accompanying discussion. These experiments indicated ca. 35% of Cy5-T1/T2-loaded microcapsules including monomers and dimers, 35% of coumarin-labeled GOx loaded microcapsules containing monomer and dimer, and ca. 7% population of the dimer structure of the coumarin-labeled GOx loaded microcapsules and Cy5-T1/T2-loaded microcapsules in microcapsular monomer/dimer mixture, which is in good agreement with the confocal fluorescence microscopy analysis.
The confocal microscopy fluorescence images of the microcapsules demonstrated the feasibility of the nucleic acid-functionalized microcapsules to form dimer structures enabling the spatial intimate contacting of the microcapsules for intercommunication of the microcapsules and operation of the biocatalytic cascade, Fig. 6(A), state I. The duplex nucleic acid bridging units generating the functional dimer microcapsule structure include, however, encoded information that allows the guided inhibition of the intercommunicated microcapsules biocatalytic cascade, Fig. 6(A). The p/q duplex generating the intercommunicated dimer dictating the biocatalytic cascade, can be separated by the addition of two fuel strands p′ and q′, state II. Thus, in the presence of the fuel strands p′ and q′, the active microcapsule configuration activating the intercommunicated biocatalytic cascade is blocked due to the separation of dimer microcapsules. That is, the blocker-induced inhibition of the biocatalytic cascade not only introduces a means to inhibit the intercell communication, but provides a proof that the intercommunication of the microcapsule originates from the intermediary formation of the dimer microcapsules. Furthermore, by the addition of counter-fuel strands p′′ and q′′ displacing the blocker units p′ and q′, the re-assembly of the active dimer structures is stimulated, resulting in the switched “ON” GOx//hemin/G-quadruplex tetrahedra biocatalytic cascade, state I. Fig. 6(B), curve (i), shows the time-dependent fluorescence changes of Resorufin formed by the intercommunicated dimer-microcapsule biocatalytic cascade driven by GOx and the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged DNA tetrahedra in state I. Fig. 6(B), curve (ii), shows the time-dependent fluorescence changes of Resorufin by the mixture consisting of the GOx-loaded microcapsules and the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged tetrahedra dimer-loaded microcapsule, treated with the fuel strands p′ and q′ and triggered by glucose. Inefficient Resorufin formation is observed, consistent with the inhibited formation of the dimer microcapsules, where the intimate spatial structure for communicating substrate transfer is perturbed. Treatment of the inhibited microcapsule mixture with the counter-fuels p′′ and q′′ reactivates the intercommunication between the microcapsule, Fig. 6(B), curve (iii). That is, the displacement of the p′/p′′ and q′/q′′ duplexes uncages the microcapsules functionalized with the p and q tethers, allowing regeneration of the intercommunicating dimer structures of the microcapsules. It should be noted that the residual very low cascaded biocatalytic activity of the p′, q′ separated GOx-loaded microcapsules and hemin/G-quadruplex-bridged T1/T2-loaded microcapsules is attributed to incomplete separation of the dimer microcapsule structure, rather than the possible exchange of loads within the dimer microcapsule structure. This is supported by an experiment, Fig. S21,† allowing the dimer-microcapsules mixture to interact for a time-interval of ten days and subsequent treatment of the mixture after this time-interval with p′, q′ to induce separation. The resulting separated microcapsule mixture demonstrated the same residual biocatalytic performance depicted in Fig. 6(B), curve (ii), indicating that no content exchange occurred even within a time-interval of ten days.
It should be noted that the rate of the biocatalytic cascade in the mixture of M1/M2 intercommunicated microcapsules is ca. 5-6-fold enhanced as comparted to the mixture of the homogenous biocatalysts, even though only ca. 9% of the microcapsules are in the “correct” configuration to allow the efficient intercommunicated cascade. This means that the “effective” rate enhancement of cascaded catalysis demonstrated by the intercommunicated pairs of microcapsules, as compared to the homogenous biocatalysts is significantly higher. Also, note that the rate enhancement by the intercommunicated microcapsules as compared to the homogenous mixture of biocatalysts is comparable to the rate enhancement demonstrated by the GOx//hemin/G-quadruplex in a single microcapsule, despite that only 9% of the microcapsules exist in the appropriate dimer configuration. This is explained by the substantially lower loading of the GOx and hemin/G-quadruplex catalysts in single microcapsules that can be accomplished in the course of the microcapsules preparation (the number of microcapsules in the different systems is approximately similar).
The successful operation of the biocatalyst cascade through the dynamic formation of dimer microcapsules assemblies allowed us to establish a three-catalysts cascade through the bi-directional intercommunication of the microcapsules, Fig. 7(A). The system consisted of the M1 microcapsules loaded with GOx, 0.12 μM, and the second type of microcapsules, M3-loaded with β-gal, 0.058 μM, and the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged tetrahedra T1/T2 dimer constituent, 0.07 μM. Since the microcapsular containments are functionalized with the tethers p and q, the dynamic assembly of M1/M3 dimer allows the bi-directional intercommunication of the microcapsules. In the presence of lactose, the β-gal catalyzed hydrolysis of lactose in microcapsules M3 yields glucose that is being transported through the dimer boundary into microcapsules M1. The aerobic oxidation of glucose in microcapsules M1 yields H2O2 that is back channeled through the dimer boundary into microcapsules M3, where the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged DNA tetrahedra T1/T2 catalyzes the oxidation of Amplex Red to Resorufin by H2O2. Fig. 7(B), curve (i), depicts the time-dependent fluorescence changes of Resorufin upon subjecting to two-capsule system in the presence of lactose, K+-ions, hemin and Amplex Red.
The three-catalysts cascade is activated through the bi-directional intercommunication of the two microcapsules. Further experiments demonstrated that exclusion of K+-ions from the system that resulted in the inhibition of the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 catalyst, prohibited the formation of Resorufin, Fig. 7(B), curve (ii). Also, addition of CE to the intercommunicating microcapsules separated the hemin/G-quadruplex bridged T1/T2 and eliminated the formation of Resorufin, Fig. 7(B), curve (iii). Finally, elimination of lactose from the system, blocked the entire intercommunicated biocatalytic cascade, Fig. 7(B), curve (iv). Fig. 7(C), compare the time-dependent fluorescence changes of Resorufin by the intercommunicated microcapsular system, curve (i), to the time-dependent fluorescence changes of Resorufin generated by the three catalysts in a homogeneous solution, where the catalysts are present at identical concentrations present in microcapsules, curve (ii). The biocatalytic cascade in the homogeneous mixture is very inefficient, and the three-catalyst cascade operating in the intercommunicating microcapsule assembly is at least 10-fold enhanced as compared to the homogeneous mixture. These results highlight the significance of bi-directional communication between the catalysts-loaded microcapsules that originates from the dynamic formation of dimer microcapsules bridged by the duplex nucleic acid p/q tethers.
We believe, however, that these results and the nucleic acid-based microcapsule assemblies introduce a substantially broader impact on the development of functional microcapsules; the introduction of other catalytic constituents into the microcapsules, such as DNA machineries66 or transcription machineries,67 the integration of dynamic catalytic networks68 into the hydrogel microcapsules, and the further functionalization of the nucleic acid-modified microcapsular hydrogel boundaries with stimuli-responsive nucleic acids that switch the chemical transformations in the microcapsules are interesting paths to follow. Furthermore, the study has emphasized the superior functions of enzyme or multi-enzyme assemblies loaded in microcapsules to drive biocatalytic transformations. Other applications of such enzyme-loaded microcapsules for therapeutic or sensing applications may be envisaged. For example, the intracapsule integration of a biocatalytic agent69 might yield effective carriers for drug release. Also, the amplification phenomenon of biocatalytic cascades, in the confined microcapsular environment, and the possibility to engineer nucleic acid tethers on the boundaries of the microcapsules provide means to anchor the microcapsules onto sensing recognition events as amplifying transducers. For example, by anchoring microcapsules loaded with biocatalytic cascades generating redox active compounds, to recognition events occurring on electrode surfaces, amplified electrochemical sensors can be realized.70
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See https://doi.org/10.1039/d2sc01542k |
‡ These authors contributed equally. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |