The publishing streak continues! Excited to share our new article in Nature Reviews Materials (@natrevmats.nature.com) entitled "Engineering Complexity into Protein-based Biomaterials for Biomedical Applications"!
Check it out here:
📜: doi.org/10.1038/s415...
🔓: rdcu.be/eRFDh
Posts by Cole DeForest
Stimuli-responsive biomaterials hold great promise in controlled therapeutic delivery, tissue engineering, and biosensing applications. Recently, molecular assembly via autonomous compilation has been employed to create topologically specified protein cargos that can be site-specifically tethered to and conditionally released from biomaterials following user-programmable Boolean logic. Prior implementation has been confined to simple fluorescent protein outputs and model protease inputs. In this manuscript, we extend the applicability of this framework by assembling all 7 unique logical operations emanating from a YES/OR/AND 3-input operator set to deliver bioactive proteins spanning diverse categories: growth factors (epidermal growth factor), model enzymes (β-lactamase, NanoLuciferase, and thioredoxin A), therapeutic nanobodies (anti-human epidermal growth factor receptor 2), de novo-engineered cytokines (Neoleukin), and fluorescent proteins (mGreenLantern). In so doing, we demonstrate programmable biomacromolecule release from material anchors in response to precise combinations of three orthogonal protease actuators while maintaining native bioactivity. Through inclusion of a photocleavable protein motif, we further establish that visible light can be employed as an additional input in specifying logic-based protein release. We anticipate these methods will powerfully expand opportunities for targeted therapeutic delivery and beyond.
Check out our new paper entitled "Boolean Logic-based Controlled Release of Bioactive Proteins with Diversified Inputs", live in @angewandtechemie.bsky.social !
Growth factors, enzymes, nanobodies, and cytokines can now be "logically" delivered!
📜: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Medicine isn’t just about finding the right therapies — it’s also about getting them to where in the body they’re needed. These new smart proteins can autonomously read bodily cues to zero in on the exact locations of diseases. @coledeforest.bsky.social
Protein-based biomaterials have risen in popularity in recent years owing to their genetic encodability, sequence specificity, monodispersity, and ability to interface with biological systems in comparison with synthetic polymer-based materials. Though naturally derived and minimally engineered proteins have been at the forefront of these efforts, recent advances in computational protein design offer exciting opportunities for next-generation biomaterial development. In this work, we employ de novo protein design methodologies to generate a suite of self-assembling multimeric proteins, whose step-growth heteropolymerization into bulk hydrogels and condensates can be exogenously triggered through small-molecule addition. Our results highlight how changes in programmed multimer valency and their triggered assembly yield materials with varying structures and viscoelasticity. We anticipate that these approaches will prove useful in rapidly generating large libraries of stimuli-responsive biomaterials that are precisely tailored to specific applications in the biosciences and beyond.
Our latest collaborative paper with David Baker's lab is now live in Cell Biomaterials (@cp-cellbiomat.bsky.social, Cell Press)! Check out "Stimuli-triggered Formation of De Novo-designed Protein Biomaterials"!
🔓 : www.cell.com/cell-biomate...
Stimulus-responsive materials have enabled advanced applications in biosensing, tissue engineering and therapeutic delivery. Although controlled molecular topology has been demonstrated as an effective route toward creating materials that respond to prespecified input combinations, prior efforts suffer from a reliance on complicated and low-yielding multistep organic syntheses that dramatically limit their utility. Harnessing the power of recombinant expression, we integrate emerging chemical biology tools to create topologically specified protein cargos that can be site-specifically tethered to and conditionally released from biomaterials following user-programmable Boolean logic. Critically, construct topology is autonomously compiled during expression through spontaneous intramolecular ligations, enabling direct and scalable synthesis of advanced operators. Using this framework, we specify protein release from biomaterials following all 17 possible YES/OR/AND logic outputs from input combinations of three orthogonal protease actuators, multiplexed delivery of three distinct biomacromolecules from hydrogels, five-input-based conditional cargo liberation and logically defined protein localization on or within living mammalian cells.
Our new paper entitled “Boolean Logic-gated Protein Presentation through Autonomously Compiled Molecular Topology” is now live at Nature Chemical Biology (@natchembio.nature.com)! Check it out!
📜: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
@uwnews.uw.edu feature write-up: www.washington.edu/news/2025/10...
Cool science alert! A plasmid encoding a photodegradable hydrogel-forming protein called PhoCoil. Find it here:
https://twp.ai/4iqKMK
@coledeforest.bsky.social
Mike Regnier, Farid Moussavi-Harami, Nate Sniadecki, and their respective labs also played instrumental roles on these exciting efforts!
This has been a huge collaborative effort overseen by Jennifer Davis and driven by co-first authors Ross Bretherton (co-advised between the DeForest and Davis labs) and Bella Reichardt.
New in @ScienceMagazine, we report that dilated cardiomyopathy can be alleviated by preventing hypocontractility-induced fibroblast expansion! The story is a fun combination of advanced in vivo and biomaterial-based in vitro models. Check it out!
📜 : doi.org/10.1126/scie...
Our new manuscript entitled "PhoCoil: A Photodegradable and Injectable Single-component Recombinant Protein Hydrogel for Minimally Invasive Delivery and Degradation" is now live at @ScienceAdvances!
Check it out here (🔓): www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Check out our new paper entitled "Genetically Encoded Interpenetrating Polymer Networks as Injectable Biomaterials for Controlled Therapeutic Protein Delivery", appearing in ACS Biomat Science & Eng!
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Congrats, @nrichbourg.bsky.social ! Looking forward to watching your lab grow at FASU-FSU!
Fantastic! This is such great news. Congrats on the new position, @monicaohnsorg.bsky.social !
For the 2nd year in a row, one of our lab members has been selected for the prestigious Goldwater Scholarship. Huge congrats to Shivani Kottantharayil for her 2025 selection (and to Annabella Li for receiving the award last year)!
UW press release is here: www.washington.edu/uaa/2025/04/...
In our latest manuscript, we demonstrate that grayscale control over local #biomaterial biochemistry and mechanics can be rapidly achieved across large constructs using an inexpensive (~$300) and commercially available LCD-based printer.
Find it published in JBMR-A! doi.org/10.1002/jbm....
Happy Holidays from the DeForest Lab!
What fun to celebrate the group’s 2024 achievements, especially in the baking sector. Our annual dessert bake-off competition was a tasty success!
The Anseth lab continues to pioneer many of the best and most versatile photoresponsive biomaterials known to our community. Congrats to @monicaohnsorg.bsky.social and Ella Hushka for summarizing the group's last 15 years of exciting efforts in their new paper!
Fun story from @matthewfainor.bsky.social on how next-gen recombinant proteins are being expressed in fruit flies, and what implications that could have for our lab-grown hydrogel biomaterials!
Professors often tell graduate students that “Your PhD is a #marathon, not a sprint”.
Having now run the 2024 Seattle Marathon (many years after finishing a PhD), I now actually feel qualified to make such a statement.
@uwmedicine.bsky.social
Would love to be included here! Thanks for organizing!
Introducing the Humanity Unlocking Biomaterials (HUB) national coordinating center. Opportunity to become involved with an incredible community, $100k research grants, core resources, and much more. Come join us! See more at our new website, here: www.humanityunlockingbiomaterials.org
Thank you, on all accounts!
It’d be great to be added here! Light-activated SpyLigation (LASL) is a recent optogenetic tool from our team: doi.org/10.1038/s415...
Great idea! We work in this space!
Great idea! Thanks for helping coordinate this transition!
Great idea! Glad to see the biomaterials community starting to come together here on Bluesky.