4.8 Article

Rapid Multilevel Compartmentalization of Stable All-Aqueous Blastosomes by Interfacial Aqueous-Phase Separation

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages 11215-11224

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c02923

Keywords

compartmentalization; aqueous two-phase system; phase separation; nanoparticle surfactant; artificial cells

Funding

  1. Army Research Office [W911NF-17-1-0003]
  2. General Research Fund from the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [HKU 17307919, 17329516, 17304017, 17305518]
  3. Excellent Young Scientists Fund (Hong Kong and Macau) from the National Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [21922816]

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Producing artificial multicellular structures to process multistep cascade reactions and mimic the fundamental aspects of living systems is an outstanding challenge. Highly biocompatible, artificial systems consisting of all-aqueous, compartmentalized multicellular systems have yet to be realized. Here, a rapid multilevel compartmentalization of an all-aqueous system where a 3D sheet of subcolloidosomes encloses a mother colloidosome by interfacial phase separation is demonstrated. These spatially organized multicellular structures are termed blastosomes since they are similar to blastula in appearance. The barrier to nanoparticle assembly at the water-water interface is overcome using oppositely charged polyelectrolytes that form a coacervate-nanoparticle-composite network. The conditions required to trigger interfacial phase separation and form blastosomes are quantified in a mapped state diagram. We show a versatile model for constructing artificial multicellular spheroids in all-aqueous systems. The rapid interfacial assembly of charged particles and polyelectrolytes can lock in nonequilibrium shapes of water, which also enables top-down technologies, such as 3D printing and microfluidics, to program flexible compartmentalized structures.

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