posted on 2024-07-23, 15:09authored byBoyu Yang, Chao Li, Yongshuo Ren, Weichen Wang, Xiangxiang Zhang, Xiaojun Han
The
bottom-up construction of artificial cells is beneficial for
understanding cell working mechanisms. The glycolysis metabolism mimicry
inside artificial cells is challenging. Herein, the glycolytic pathway
(Entner–Doudoroff pathway in archaea) is reconstituted inside
artificial cells. The glycolytic pathway comprising glucose dehydrogenase
(GDH), gluconate dehydratase (GAD), and 2-keto-3-deoxygluconate aldolase
(KDGA) converts glucose molecules to pyruvate molecules. Inside artificial
cells, pyruvate molecules are further converted into alanine with
the help of alanine dehydrogenase (AlaDH) to build a metabolic pathway
for synthesizing amino acid. On the other hand, the pyruvate molecules
from glycolysis stimulate the living mitochondria to produce ATP inside
artificial cells, which further trigger actin monomers to polymerize
to form actin filaments. With the addition of methylcellulose inside
the artificial cell, the actin filaments form adjacent to the inner
lipid bilayer, deforming the artificial cell from a spherical shape
to a spindle shape. The spindle-shaped artificial cell reverses to
a spherical shape by depolymerizing the actin filament upon laser
irradiation. The glycolytic pathway and its further extension to produce
amino acids (or ATP) inside artificial cells pave the path to build
functional artificial cells with more complicated metabolic pathways.