Yolk–Shell Encapsulation of Cells by Biomimetic Mineralization and Visible Light-Induced Surface Graft Polymerization
Kanglei Wang,
Changwen Zhao,
Yuhong Ma
et al.
Abstract:The
pursuit of low-cytotoxicity modification strategies represents
a prominent avenue in cell coating research, holding immense significance
for the advancement of practical living cell-related technologies.
Here, we presented a novel method to fabricate encapsulated yeast
cells with a yolk–shell structure by biomimetic mineralization
and visible-light-induced surface graft polymerization. In this approach,
an amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) shell was first deposited on
the surface of a yeast cell (cell@ACC)… Show more
The metal-organic complex (MOC) has extensively been studied as a prominent component in interface engineering. Once the designated missions of MOC films are completed, or while they are still operational,...
The metal-organic complex (MOC) has extensively been studied as a prominent component in interface engineering. Once the designated missions of MOC films are completed, or while they are still operational,...
Yeast capsules (YCs) produced from Saccharomyces cerevisiae with encapsulated fluorescent phenosafranin and azure dyes were used as catalytic template guides for developing hybrid functional organic/inorganic hollow microstructures with silica (SiO2) deposited on their surface generated in the imidazole-buffered system without the addition of any cationic surfactant. YCs-doped with SiO2 act as fluorescence emitters maintaining dye-loaded materials by sealing the microporous surface of YCs. We used vinyltrimethoxysilane as a precursor of SiO2 endowed with functional vinyl groups facilitating their further modification without disturbing the polysaccharide wall integrity. Consequently, the hybrid fluorescent polysaccharide/silica microcapsules (YC@dye@SiO2) are promising for wide-ranging optoelectronic applications in electrochromic and OLED devices with biocompatibility and biodegradability properties.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.