There is an increasing trend of combining living cells with inorganic semiconductors to construct semi-artificial photosynthesis systems. Creating a robust and benign bio-abiotic interface is key to the success of such solar-to-chemical conversions but often faces a variety of challenges, including biocompatibility and the susceptibility of cell membrane to high-energy damage arising from direct interfacial contact. Here, we report living mineralized biofilms as an ultrastable and biocompatible bio-abiotic interface to implement single enzyme to whole-cell photocatalytic applications. These photocatalyst-mineralized biofilms exhibited efficient photoelectrical responses and were further exploited for diverse photocatalytic reaction systems including a whole-cell photocatalytic CO
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reduction system enabled by the same biofilm-producing strain. Segregated from the extracellularly mineralized semiconductors, the bacteria remained alive even after 5 cycles of photocatalytic NADH regeneration reactions, and the biofilms could be easily regenerated. Our work thus demonstrates the construction of biocompatible interfaces using biofilm matrices and establishes proof of concept for future sustainable photocatalytic applications.
This review highlights the design principles for functional amyloid fibrillar assemblies from an engineering perspective as well as through the lens of structural insights.
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