A universal surface functionalization technique to chemically enhance live microbial cells

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Abstract

Microbial surface functionalization is a powerful strategy for endowing microbes with novel, non-genetic functions. However, existing methods are often species-specific, limited in scope, and compromise cell viability. Here, we present a universal and modular platform for high-density, reproducible surface functionalization across diverse microbial species—including Gram-positive, Gram-negative, aerobic, and anaerobic bacteria—using multiple molecular classes such as fluorophores, enzymes, and nucleic acids. Our method preserves cell viability, and achieves 50x higher functionalization efficiency than previous methods with a standardized protocol applicable to any azide-containing molecule. Applications of the method show reproducible and tunable phenotypic outcomes at the single-cell level: fluorophore labeling yielded adjustable fluorescence, β-lactamase conferred scalable antibiotic resistance, and DNA coatings modulated adhesion and aggregation. This platform provides quantitative, non-genetic control over microbial phenotypes and complements genetic engineering approaches. It enables new possibilities for microbial design in biotechnology, medicine, and environmental applications where genetic modification is impractical or undesirable.

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