posted on 2020-06-12, 20:07authored byShipei Zhu, Joe Forth, Ganhua Xie, Youchuang Chao, Jingxuan Tian, Thomas P. Russell, Ho Cheung Shum
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.