Prof. Dr. Aránzazu del Campo

Prof. Dr. Aránzazu del Campo

Scientific Director
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-510

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Publications

2023
Encapsulation of bacteria in bilayer Pluronic thin film hydrogels: A safe format for engineered living materials

Bhusari, Shardul | Kim, Juhyun | Polizzi, Karen | Sankaran, Shrikrishnan | del Campo, Aránzazu

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In engineered living materials (ELMs) non-living matrices encapsulate microorganisms to acquire capabilities like sensing or biosynthesis. The confinement of the organisms to the matrix and the prevention of overgrowth and escape during the lifetime of the material is necessary for the application of ELMs into real devices. In this study, a bilayer thin film hydrogel of Pluronic F127 and Pluronic F127 acrylate polymers supported on a solid substrate is introduced. The inner hydrogel layer contains genetically engineered bacteria and supports their growth, while the outer layer acts as an envelope and does not allow leakage of the living organisms outside of the film for at least 15 days. Due to the flat and transparent nature of the construct, the thin layer is suited for microscopy and spectroscopy-based analyses. The composition and properties of the inner and outer layer are adjusted independently to fulfil viability and confinement requirements. We demonstrate that bacterial growth and light-induced protein production are possible in the inner layer and their extent is influenced by the crosslinking degree of the used hydrogel. Bacteria inside the hydrogel are viable long term, they can act as lactate-sensors and remain active after storage in phosphate buffer at room temperature for at least 3 weeks. The versatility of bilayer bacteria thin-films is attractive for fundamental studies and for the development of application-oriented ELMs.

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Biomaterials Advances ,
2023, 145 213240.

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Gelation Kinetics and Mechanical Properties of Thiol-Tetrazole Methylsulfone Hydrogels Designed for Cell Encapsulation

Miguel-Jiménez, Adrián de | Ebeling, Bastian | Paez, Julieta I | Fink-Straube, Claudia | Pearson, Samuel | del Campo, Aránzazu

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Hydrogel precursors that crosslink within minutes are essential for the development of cell encapsulation matrices and their implementation in automated systems. Such timescales allow sufficient mixing of cells and hydrogel precursors under low shear forces and the achievement of homogeneous networks and cell distributions in the 3D cell culture. The previous work showed that the thiol-tetrazole methylsulfone (TzMS) reaction crosslinks star-poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels within minutes at around physiological pH and can be accelerated or slowed down with small pH changes. The resulting hydrogels are cytocompatible and stable in cell culture conditions. Here, the gelation kinetics and mechanical properties of PEG-based hydrogels formed by thiol-TzMS crosslinking as a function of buffer, crosslinker structure and degree of TzMS functionality are reported. Crosslinkers of different architecture, length and chemical nature (PEG versus peptide) are tested, and degree of TzMS functionality is modified by inclusion of RGD cell-adhesive ligand, all at concentration ranges typically used in cell culture. These studies corroborate that thiol/PEG-4TzMS hydrogels show gelation times and stiffnesses that are suitable for 3D cell encapsulation and tunable through changes in hydrogel composition. The results of this study guide formulation of encapsulating hydrogels for manual and automated 3D cell culture.

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Macromolecular Bioscience ,
2023, 23 (2), 2200419.

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Engineered living materials for the conversion of a low-cost foodgrade precursor to a high-value flavonoid

Riedel, Florian | Puertas Bartolomé, María | Teruel Enrico, Lara Luana | Fink-Straube, Claudia | Nguyen Dong, Cao | Gherlone, Fabio | Huang, Ying | Valiante, Vito | del Campo, Aránzazu | Sankaran, Shrikrishnan

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Microbial biofactories allow the upscaled production of high-value compounds in biotechnological processes. This is particularly advantageous for compounds like flavonoids that promote better health through their antioxidant, antibacterial, anticancer and other beneficial effects but are only produced in small quantities in their natural plant-based hosts. Bacteria like E. coli have been genetically modified with enzyme cascades to produce flavonoids like naringenin and pinocembrin from coumaric or cinnamic acid. Despite advancements in yield optimization, the production of these compounds still involves high costs associated with their biosynthesis, purification, storage and transport. An alternative production strategy could involve the direct delivery of the microbial biofactories to the body. In such a strategy, ensuring biocontainment of the engineered microbes in the body and controlling production rates are major challenges. In this study, these two aspects are addressed by developing engineered living materials (ELMs) consisting of probiotic microbial biofactories encapsulated in biocompatible hydrogels. Engineered probiotic E. coli Nissle 1917 able to efficiently convert cinnamic acid into pinocembrin were encapsulated in poly(vinyl alcohol)-based hydrogels. The biofactories are contained in the hydrogels for a month and remain metabolically active during this time. Control over production levels is achieved by the containment inside the material, which regulates bacteria growth, and by the amount of cinnamic acid in the medium.

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Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology ,
2023, 11 1278062.

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Cytocompatibility evaluation of PEG-methylsulfone hydrogels

Trujillo, Sara | Kasper, Jennifer Y. | Miguel-Jimenez, Adrián De | Abt, Britta | Bauer, Alina | Mekontso Ngaffo, Joelle A. | Pearson, Samuel | del Campo, Aránzazu

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Methylsulfone derivatized poly(ethylene) glycol (PEG) macromers can be biofunctionalized with thiolated ligands and cross-linked with thiol-based cross-linkers to obtain bioactive PEG hydrogels for in situ cell encapsulation. Methylsulfonyl-thiol (MS-SH) reactions present several advantages for this purpose when compared to other thiol-based cross-linking systems. They proceed with adequate and tunable kinetics for encapsulation, they reach a high conversion degree with good selectivity, and they generate stable reaction products. Our previous work demonstrated the cytocompatibility of cross-linked PEG-MS/thiol hydrogels in contact with fibroblasts. However, the cytocompatibility of the in situ MS-SH cross-linking reaction itself, which generates methylsulfinic acid as byproduct at the cross-linked site, remains to be evaluated. These studies are necessary to evaluate the potential of these systems for in vivo applications. Here we perform an extensive cytocompatibility study of PEG hydrogels during in situ cross-linking by the methylsulfonyl-thiol reaction. We compare these results with maleimide–thiol cross-linked PEGs which are well established for cell culture and in vivo experiments and do not involve the release of a byproduct. We show that fibroblasts and endothelial cells remain viable after in situ polymerization of methylsulfonyl-thiol gels on the top of the cell layers. Cell viability seems better than after in situ cross-linking hydrogels with maleimide–thiol chemistry. The endothelial cell proinflammatory phenotype is low and similar to the one obtained by the maleimide–thiol reaction. Finally, no activation of monocytes is observed. All in all, these results demonstrate that the methylsulfonyl-thiol chemistry is cytocompatible and does not trigger high pro-inflammatory responses in endothelial cells and monocytes. These results make methylsulfonyl-thiol chemistries eligible for in vivo testing and eventually clinical application in the future.

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ACS Omega ,
2023, 8 (35), 32043-32052.

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2022
Molecular stiffness cues of an interpenetrating network hydrogel for cell adhesion

Li, Bin | Çolak, Arzu | Blass, Johanna | Han, Mitchell | Zhang, Jingnan | Zheng, Yijun | Jiang, Qiyang | Bennewitz, Roland | Campo, Aránzazu del

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Understanding cells' response to the macroscopic and nanoscale properties of biomaterials requires studies in model systems with the possibility to tailor their mechanical properties and different length scales. Here, we describe an interpenetrating network (IPN) design based on a stiff PEGDA host network interlaced within a soft 4-arm PEG-Maleimide/thiol (guest) network. We quantify the nano- and bulk mechanical behavior of the IPN and the single network hydrogels by single-molecule force spectroscopy and rheological measurements. The IPN presents different mechanical cues at the molecular scale, depending on which network is linked to the probe, but the same mechanical properties at the macroscopic length scale as the individual host network. Cells attached to the interpenetrating (guest) network of the IPN or to the single network (SN) PEGDA hydrogel modified with RGD adhesive ligands showed comparable attachment and spreading areas, but cells attached to the guest network of the IPN, with lower molecular stiffness, showed a larger number and size of focal adhesion complexes and a higher concentration of the Hippo pathway effector Yes-associated protein (YAP) than cells linked to the PEGDA single network. The observations indicate that cell adhesion to the IPN hydrogel through the network with lower molecular stiffness proceeds effectively as if a higher ligand density is offered. We claim that IPNs can be used to decipher how changes in ECM design and connectivity at the local scale affect the fate of cells cultured on biomaterials.

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Materials Today Bio ,
2022, 15 100323.

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Regulating Bacterial Behavior within Hydrogels of Tunable Viscoelasticity

Bhusari, Shardul | Sankaran, Shrikrishnan | del Campo, Aránzazu

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Engineered living materials (ELMs) are a new class of materials in which living organism incorporated into diffusive matrices uptake a fundamental role in material's composition and function. Understanding how the spatial confinement in 3D can regulate the behavior of the embedded cells is crucial to design and predict ELM's function, minimize their environmental impact and facilitate their translation into applied materials. This study investigates the growth and metabolic activity of bacteria within an associative hydrogel network (Pluronic-based) with mechanical properties that can be tuned by introducing a variable degree of acrylate crosslinks. Individual bacteria distributed in the hydrogel matrix at low density form functional colonies whose size is controlled by the extent of permanent crosslinks. With increasing stiffness and elastic response to deformation of the matrix, a decrease in colony volumes and an increase in their sphericity are observed. Protein production follows a different pattern with higher production yields occurring in networks with intermediate permanent crosslinking degrees. These results demonstrate that matrix design can be used to control and regulate the composition and function of ELMs containing microorganisms. Interestingly, design parameters for matrices to regulate bacteria behavior show similarities to those elucidated for 3D culture of mammalian cells.

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Advanced Science ,
2022, 9 (17), 2106026.

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Melt Electrowriting enables fabrication of biommetic hierarchical scaffolds

Wlodarczyk-Biegun, Malgorzata | Zielinski, Piotr | Gladysz, Magdalena | Hofman, Anno | Wu, Xixi | Villiou, Maria | Koch, Marcus | del Campo, Aránzazu | Kamperman, Marleen

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Tissue Engineering A ,
2022, 28 (Suppl. 1), S362-S362.

Melt Electrowriting of Graded Porous Scaffolds to Mimic the Matrix Structure of the Human Trabecular Meshwork

Włodarczyk-Biegun | Villiou, Maria | Koch, Klaus Peter | Muth, Christina | Wang | Ott | del Campo

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The permeability of the human trabecular meshwork (HTM) regulates eye pressure via a porosity gradient across its thickness modulated by stacked layers of matrix fibrils and cells. Changes in HTM porosity are associated with increases in intraocular pressure and the progress of diseases such as glaucoma. Engineered HTMs could help to understand the structure–function relation in natural tissues and lead to new regenerative solutions. Here, melt electrowriting (MEW) is explored as a biofabrication technique to produce fibrillar, porous scaffolds that mimic the multilayer, gradient structure of native HTM. Poly(caprolactone) constructs with a height of 125–500 μm and fiber diameters of 10–12 μm are printed. Scaffolds with a tensile modulus between 5.6 and 13 MPa and a static compression modulus in the range of 6–360 kPa are obtained by varying the scaffold design, that is, the density and orientation of the fibers and number of stacked layers. Primary HTM cells attach to the scaffolds, proliferate, and form a confluent layer within 8–14 days, depending on the scaffold design. High cell viability and cell morphology close to that in the native tissue are observed. The present work demonstrates the utility of MEW for reconstructing complex morphological features of natural tissues.

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ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering ,
2022, 8 (9), 3899-3911.

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Inhibition of Collagenase Q1 of Bacillus cereus as a Novel Antivirulence Strategy for the Treatment of Skin-Wound Infections

Alhayek, Alaa | Khan, Essak S. | Schönauer, Esther | Däinghaus, Tobias | Shafiei, Roya | Voos, Katrin | Han, Mitchell K. L | Ducho, Christian | Posselt, Gernot | Wessler, Silja | Brandstetter, Hans | Haupenthal, Jörg | del Campo, Aránzazu | Hirsch, Anna K. H.

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Abstract Despite the progress in surgical techniques and antibiotic prophylaxis, opportunistic wound infections with Bacillus cereus remain a public health problem. Secreted toxins are one of the main factors contributing to B. cereus pathogenicity. A promising strategy to treat such infections is to target these toxins and not the bacteria. Although the exoenzymes produced by B. cereus are thoroughly investigated, little is known about the role of B. cereus collagenases in wound infections. In this report, the collagenolytic activity of secreted collagenases (Col) is characterized in the B. cereus culture supernatant (csn) and its isolated recombinantly produced ColQ1 is characterized. The data reveals that ColQ1 causes damage on dermal collagen (COL). This results in gaps in the tissue, which might facilitate the spread of bacteria. The importance of B. cereus collagenases is also demonstrated in disease promotion using two inhibitors. Compound 2 shows high efficacy in peptidolytic, gelatinolytic, and COL degradation assays. It also preserves the fibrillar COLs in skin tissue challenged with ColQ1, as well as the viability of skin cells treated with B. cereus csn. A Galleria mellonella model highlights the significance of collagenase inhibition in vivo.

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Advanced Therapeutics ,
2022, 5 (3), 2100222.

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Elastomeric Optical Waveguides by Extrusion Printing

Feng, Jun | Zheng, Yijun | Jiang, Qiyang | Włodarczyk-Biegun, Małgorzata K. | Pearson, Samuel | del Campo, Aránzazu

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Abstract Advances in optogenetics and the increasing use of implantable devices for therapies and health monitoring are driving demand for compliant, biocompatible optical waveguides and scalable methods for their manufacture. Molding, thermal drawing, and dip-coating are the most prevalent approaches in recent literature. Here the authors demonstrate that extrusion printing at room temperature can be used for continuous fabrication of compliant optical waveguides with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) core and crosslinked Pluronic F127-diacrylate (Pluronic-DA) cladding. The optical fibers are printed from fluid precursor inks and stabilized by physical interactions and photoinitiated crosslinking in the Pluronic-DA. The printed fibers show optical loss values of 0.13–0.34 dB cm–1 in air and tissue within the wavelength range of 405–520 nm. The fibers have a Young's Modulus (Pluronic cladding) of 150 kPa and can be stretched to more than 5 times their length. The optical loss of the fibers shows little variation with extension. This work demonstrates how printing can simplify the fabrication of compliant and stretchable devices from materials approved for clinical use. These can be of interest for optogenetic or photopharmacology applications in extensible tissues, like muscles or heart.

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Advanced Materials Technologies ,
2022, 7 (10), 2101539.

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