Synthesis of glycopolymers with specificity for bacterial strains via bacteria-guided polymerization†
Abstract
Identifying probiotics and pathogens is of great interest to the health of the human body. It is critical to develop microbiota-targeted therapies to have high specificity including strain specificity. In this study, we have utilized E. coli MG1655 bacteria as living templates to synthesize glycopolymers in situ with high selectivity. By this bacteria-sugar monomer-aptation-polymerization (BS-MAP) method, we have obtained glycopolymers from the surface of bacteria which can recognize template bacteria from two strains of E. coli and the specific bacteria-binding ability of glycopolymers was confirmed by both bacterial aggregation experiment and QCM-D measurements. Furthermore, the synthesized glycopolymers have shown a powerful inhibitory ability which can prevent bacteria from harming cells in both anti-infection and co-culture tests.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Celebrating the 110th Anniversary of chemistry at Soochow University, SU 120: Celebrating 120 Years of Soochow University and 2019 Chemical Science HOT Article Collection