Interfacial interactions between protective, surface-engineered shells and encapsulated bacteria with different cell surface composition†
Abstract
Surface-engineered encapsulation is a non-genetic method to protect living organisms against harsh environmental conditions. Different cell encapsulation methods exist, yielding shells with different interfacial-interactions with encapsulated, bacterial surfaces. However, the impact of interfacial-interactions on the protection offered by different shells is unclear and can vary for bacteria with different surface composition. Probiotic bacteria require protection against gastro-intestinal fluids and antibiotics. Here, we encapsulated two probiotic strains using ZIF-8 (zeolitic imidazolate framework) biomineralization (strong-interaction by coordinate–covalent bonding), alginate gelation (intermediate-interaction by hydrogen bonding) or protamine-assisted packing of SiO2 nanoparticles yielding a yolk–shell (weak-interaction across a void between shells and bacterial surfaces). The surface of probiotic Lactobacillus acidophilus was rich in protein, yielding a hydrophilic, positively-charged surface below and a negatively-charged one above pH 4.0. Probiotic Bifidobacterium infantis had a hydrophilic, uncharged surface, rich in polysaccharides with little proteins. Although amino groups are required for coordinate–covalent bonding of zinc and hydrogen bonding of alginate, both L. acidophilus and B. infantis could be encapsulated using ZIF-8 biomineralization and alginate gelation. Weakly, intermediately and strongly interacting shells all yielded porous shells. The strongly interacting ZIF-8 biomineralized shell made encapsulated bacteria more susceptible to antibiotics, presumably due to the cell wall damage already inflicted during Zif-8 biomineralization. Overall, weakly interacting yolk–shells and intermediately interacting alginate gels protected best and maintained probiotic activity of encapsulated bacteria. The impact of interfacial-interactions between shells and encapsulated bacteria on different aspect of protection described here, contributes to the further development of effective surface-engineered shells and its application for protecting bacteria.