- Professor Jae-Byum Chang and Professor Yeon Sik Jung's joint research team of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering developed a highly tunable bio-templating method "CamBio" that makes use of intracellular protein structures
- Substrate performance improvement of up to 230% demonstrated via surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS)
- Expected to have price competitiveness over bio-templating method as it expands the range of biological samples
- Expected to expand the range of application of nanostructure synthesis technology by utilizing various biological structures
< Photo 1. (From left) Professor Yeon-Sik Jeong, Ph.D. candidate Dae-Hyun Song, Professor Jae-Byum Chang, and (from top right) Dr. Chang-Woo Song and Dr. Seung-Hee Cho of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering >
Biological structures have complex characteristics that are difficult to replicate artificially, but biotemplating methods* that directly utilize these biological structures have been used in various fields of application. The KAIST research team succeeded in utilizing previously unusable biological structures and expanding the areas in which biotemplate methods can be applied.
*Biotemplating: A method of using biotemplates as a mold to create functional structural materials, utilizing the functions of these biological structures, from viruses to the tissues and organs that make up our bodies
KAIST (President Kwang Hyung Lee) announced on the 10th that a joint research team of Professors Jae-Byum Chang and Professor Yeon Sik Jung of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering developed a biotemplating method that utilizes specific internal proteins in biological samples and has high tunability.
Existing biotemplate methods mainly utilize only the external surface of biological samples or have limitations in utilizing the structure-function correlation of various biological structures due to limited dimensions and sample sizes, making it difficult to create functional nanostructures.
To solve this problem, the research team studied a way to utilize various biological structures within the cells while retaining high malleability.
< Figure 1. CamBio utilizing microtubules, a intracellular protein structure. The silver nanoparticle chains synthesized along the microtubules that span the entire cell interior can be observed through an electron microscope, and it is shown that this can be used as a successful SERS substrate. >
As a result of the research, the team developed the "Conversion to advanced materials via labeled Biostructure", shortened as "CamBio", that can selectively synthesize nanostructures with various specificities and sizes from specific protein structures in biological samples composed of various proteins.
The CamBio method secures high re-tunability of functional nanostructures that can be manufactured from biological samples by merging various manufacturing and biological technologies.
Through the technology of repeatedly attaching antibodies, arranging cells in a certain shape, and thinly slicing tissue, the functional nanostructures made with CamBio showed improved performance on the surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS)* substrate used for material detection.
*Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS): A technology that can detect very small amounts of substances using light, based on the principle that specific substances react to light and amplifies signals on surfaces of metals such as gold or silver.
The research team found that the nanoparticle chains made using the intracellular protein structures through the process of repeated labeling with antibodies allowed easier control, and improved SERS performance by up to 230%.
In addition, the research team expanded from utilizing the structures inside cells to obtaining samples of muscle tissues inside meat using a cryosectioner and successfully producing a substrate with periodic bands made of metal particles by performing the CamBio process. This method of producing a substrate not only allows large-scale production using biological samples, but also shows that it is a cost-effective method.
< Figure 2. A method for securing tunability using CamBio at the cell level. An example of integrating the repetitive antibody labeling and cell patterning technology with CamBio to control the characteristics by integrating the tunability of the structure through biotemplating is shown. >
The CamBio developed by the research team is expected to be used as a way to solve problems faced by various research fields as it is to expand the range of bio-samples that can be produced for various usage.
The first author, Dae-Hyeon Song, a Ph.D. candidate of KAIST Department of Materials Science and Engineering said, "Through CamBio, we have comprehensively accumulated bioprototyping methods that can utilize more diverse protein structures," and "If combined with the latest biological technologies such as gene editing and 3D bioprinting and new material synthesis technologies, biostructures can be utilized in various fields of application."
< Figure 3. A method for securing tunability using CamBio at the tissue level. In order to utilize proteins inside muscle tissue, the frozen tissue sectioning technology is combined, and through this, a substrate with a periodic nanoparticle band pattern is successfully produced, and it is shown that large-area acquisition of samples and price competitiveness can be achieved. >
This study, in which the Ph.D. candidate Dae-Hyeon Song along with Dr. Chang Woo Song, and Dr. Seunghee Cho of the same department participated as the first authors, was published online in the international academic journal, Advanced Science, on November 13th, 2024.
(Paper title: Highly Tunable, Nanomaterial-Functionalized Structural Templating of Intracellular Protein Structures Within Biological Species) https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202406492
This study was conducted with the support of the National Research Foundation of Korea through its Science Challenge Convergence Research and Development Project, Wearable Platform Material Technology Center, Global Bio-Fusion Interfacing Materials Center, and the Bio Data Quality Leading Center.