Bioinspired claw-engaged and biolubricated swimming microrobots creating active retention in blood vessels.
Tianlong LiShimin YuBei SunYilong LiXinlong WangYunlu PanChunlei SongYukun RenZhanxiang ZhangKenneth T V GrattanZhiguang WuJie ZhaoPublished in: Science advances (2023)
Swimming microrobots guided in the circulation system offer considerable promise in precision medicine but currently suffer from problems such as limited adhesion to blood vessels, intensive blood flow, and immune system clearance-all reducing the targeted interaction. A swimming microrobot design with clawed geometry, a red blood cell (RBC) membrane-camouflaged surface, and magnetically actuated retention is discussed, allowing better navigation and inspired by the tardigrade's mechanical claw engagement, coupled to an RBC membrane coating, to minimize blood flow impact. Using clinical intravascular optical coherence tomography in vivo, the microrobots' activity and dynamics in a rabbit jugular vein was monitored, illustrating very effective magnetic propulsion, even against a flow of ~2.1 cm/s, comparable with rabbit blood flow characteristics. The equivalent friction coefficient with magnetically actuated retention is elevated ~24-fold, compared to magnetic microspheres, achieving active retention at 3.2 cm/s, for >36 hours, showing considerable promise across biomedical applications.
Keyphrases
- blood flow
- red blood cell
- molecularly imprinted
- optical coherence tomography
- mental health
- big data
- social media
- coronary artery
- magnetic resonance
- machine learning
- staphylococcus aureus
- biofilm formation
- escherichia coli
- cancer therapy
- candida albicans
- drug delivery
- ultrasound guided
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- computed tomography
- deep learning
- simultaneous determination