Angela Belcher leans
in to watch as a machine presses down slowly on the plunger of a syringe, injecting a billion harmless viruses into
a clear liquid. Instead of diffusing into the solution as they escape the
needle, the viruses cling together, forming a wispy white fiber that’s several
centimeters long and about as strong as a strand of nylon. A graduate student,
Chung-Yi Chiang, fishes it out with a pair of tweezers. Then he holds it up to
an ultraviolet light, and the fiber begins to glow bright red.
In producing this novel
fiber, the researchers have demonstrated a completely new way of making
nanomaterials, one that uses viruses as microscopic building blocks. Belcher, a
professor of materials science and biological engineering at MIT, says the
approach has two main advantages. First, in high concentrations the viruses
tend to organize themselves, lining up side by side to form an orderly pattern.
Second, the viruses can be genetically engineered to bind to and organize
inorganic materials such as those used in battery electrodes, transistors, and
solar cells. The programmed viruses coat themselves with the materials and
then, by aligning with other viruses, assemble into crystalline structures
useful for making high-performance devices.
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But the approach is not
just an alternative way to make familiar devices; it could also be the impetus
for developing entirely new ones. In past work, Belcher has created virus-based
thin films for rechargeable batteries. Now that she can spin viruses into
fibers, she envisions threadlike batteries and other electronic devices that
can be woven directly into clothing. “It’s not really analogous to anything
that’s done now,” she says. “It’s about giving totally new kinds of
functionalities to fibers.”
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The virus-based fibers
have caught the attention of U.S. Army researchers. They hope to incorporate
future versions of the fibers into uniforms, weaving them into the fabric along
with other supporting materials. The resulting fabrics could have an array of
advanced capabilities. Clothing made with them could sense agents of chemical and
biological warfare; it might also store energy from the sun and power
portable electronic devices, such as night-vision gear. Charlene Mello, a
macromolecular scientist at the Natick Soldier Research, Development, and Engineering Center
in Natick, MA, says that while such uniforms will probably
take decades to develop, Belcher’s work has paved the way for them.
Spinning Viruses
Belcher uses
different procedures to make different kinds of virus fibers. To make the
glowing fibers, she first used conventional genetic-engineering methods to
modify the virus DNA so that one of the proteins that make up the body of the
virus has extra copies of a specific amino acid at one end. At the same time,
the researchers synthesized quantum dots (semiconductor nanocrystals that emit
intense light at precisely tuned wavelengths) with surface amine groups that
bind to the overproduced amino acid. The result: hundreds of quantum dots
glommed onto each virus, which combined with similar viral particles to form a
fiber that emits light.
Often, however, it’s not obvious how to make a virus bind to
specific inorganic materials, such as gold particles. In these situations,
Belcher uses a method sometimes called “directed evolution,” which allows her
to quickly modify viruses to work with a range of materials.
In this case, directed evolution begins with a small vial
that Chiang pulls from a refrigerator. Inside is a clear fluid that contains a
billion viruses; they are nearly identical, but each has a subtle genetic
variation introduced by the researchers. The variations are, in part,
fortuitous: the researchers add a randomly generated sequence of DNA to each
virus. But the added DNA, which codes for a short strand of amino acids called
a peptide, is inserted into the gene for a select protein. Since there are so
many variations among the viruses in the vial, some of them should randomly
have peptides that bind to a useful inorganic material. The researchers simply
pour the contents of the vial onto a target material, such as a small square of
gold, and give the viruses a chance to bind. Then they wash the material. After
a few repetitions, only the viruses that happen to bind strongly remain. The
process allows the researchers to quickly engineer viruses to bind to a particular
material, even if they don’t know ahead of time what sequence of amino acids is
likely to work.
Once the right viruses have been made, getting them to form a
fiber is relatively simple. First, the researchers concentrate the viruses so
that their shape and chemical properties induce them to pack closely together
in a crystalline pattern. Then they force the viruses through a needle and into
a solution–a conventional process, called spinning, that helps determine the
diameter of the fiber. After leaving the needle, the closely packed viruses
tend to hold together. But to further strengthen the fiber, the researchers add
a chemical linking agent to the solution; this agent binds neighboring viruses
to each other. The desired inorganic materials can be added either before or
after the fiber is formed.
Encouraged by their success with the quantum-dot-studded
glowing fibers, Belcher and her coworkers hope to show that similar fibers can
be made into, among other things, sensors, solar cells, and batteries. For example,
they envision engineering two types of virus fibers, one that serves as a
negative battery electrode and another that serves as a positive electrode.
These fibers could be twisted together, with a polymer electrolyte between
them, to make a rechargeable battery that could be woven into clothes.
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Hurdles remain to be cleared, of course, before the technique
will yield complex practical devices. For one thing, Belcher will need to
invent fibers that do more than just glow red. But her methods make it
relatively easy to try out different materials and new designs. The simple
virus, says Belcher, gives her a great deal of flexibility. “It’s just a
wonderful unit,” she says. “Nature gives you the perfect starting
material.”
Kevin Bullis is the nanotechnology and materials science editor of Technology Review.