bims-livmat Biomed News
on Living materials
Issue of 2026–05–03
two papers selected by
Sara Trujillo Muñoz, Leibniz-Institut für Neue Materialien



  1. Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2026 Apr 27. pii: S0169-409X(26)00117-1. [Epub ahead of print] 115883
      Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and synthetic biology are transforming biological research and biotechnology. These fields are for the first time enabling the design and development of human and bacterial cells that can serve as "living" drug delivery vehicles that perform sustained release of therapeutic cargo with spatiotemporal control. In recent years, human and bacterial cells have been engineered to deliver peptides, proteins, and biologics for treating a wide range of human diseases using synthetic biology approaches. To engineer effective living drug delivery systems, detailed knowledge is required about how to design receptors that can specifically sense the tissues targeted for drug delivery, signaling networks that can process signals from these receptors, and gene circuits that can control therapeutic cargo production and release. However, elucidating such receptors, signal processing and gene regulatory elements, and gene circuit compositions by traditional design-build-test-learn approaches is difficult and low throughput. Here we review how advances in AI and synthetic biology are meeting these challenges. We describe examples of how human cells and bacteria are engineered to become living drug delivery vehicles. We discuss how AI and synthetic biology approaches are being applied to discover the sequence-to-function design principles for engineering synthetic receptors, signaling proteins, and gene regulatory elements and the composition-to-function design principles for engineering synthetic gene circuits. We share an outlook on opportunities for AI and synthetic biology to synergize for creating next-generation living drug delivery systems.
    Keywords:  Artificial intelligence; Composition-to-function; Living drug delivery; Massively parallel reporter assays; Structure-to-function; Synthetic biology
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addr.2026.115883
  2. J Am Chem Soc. 2026 Apr 27.
      Here, we report selective covalent assembly of Gram-negative bacteria and synthetic polymers into functional living materials. We discovered that triblock polymers decorated with vinyl sulfone (VS), a motif that forms a stable covalent bond with cysteine residues on surface proteins, yielded stable covalent assembly with bacterial cells. Notably, we found that these assemblies were uniquely cell-type-specific, occurring only in Gram-negative bacteria, highlighting differences in surface structures and the macromolecular diffusion barrier across bacterial species. We also demonstrated that assembling engineered cells into materials results in situ melanin production from living materials, with robust biocontainment and mechanical reinforcement. Spontaneous enrichment of tyrosine-derived red pigments in the supernatant showcases the effect of confinement in a complex biochemical pathway. This work establishes a platform for encoding complex, engineered, and evolved functions of Gram-negative bacteria into synthetic materials, enabling the development of a wide range of material-based bioreactors.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6c04104