| Literature DB >> 29193346 |
Jinxing Li1, Pavimol Angsantikul1, Wenjuan Liu1, Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila1, Xiaocong Chang1, Elodie Sandraz1, Yuyan Liang1, Siyu Zhu1, Yue Zhang1, Chuanrui Chen1, Weiwei Gao1, Liangfang Zhang1, Joseph Wang1.
Abstract
One emerging and exciting topic in robotics research is the design of micro-/nanoscale robots for biomedical operations. Unlike industrial robots that are developed primarily to automate routine and dangerous tasks, biomedical nanorobots are designed for complex, physiologically relevant environments, and tasks that involve unanticipated biological events. Here, a biologically interfaced nanorobot is reported, made of magnetic helical nanomotors cloaked with the plasma membrane of human platelets. The resulting biomimetic nanorobots possess a biological membrane coating consisting of diverse functional proteins associated with human platelets. Compared to uncoated nanomotors which experience severe biofouling effects and hence hindered propulsion in whole blood, the platelet-membrane-cloaked nanomotors disguise as human platelets and display efficient propulsion in blood over long time periods. The biointerfaced nanorobots display platelet-mimicking properties, including adhesion and binding to toxins and platelet-adhering pathogens, such as Shiga toxin and Staphylococcus aureus bacteria. The locomotion capacity and platelet-mimicking biological function of the biomimetic nanomotors offer efficient binding and isolation of these biological threats. The dynamic biointerfacing platform enabled by platelet-membrane cloaked nanorobots thus holds considerable promise for diverse biomedical and biodefense applications.Entities:
Keywords: biofouling; biothreat; nanomedicine; nanorobots; platelet membranes
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29193346 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201704800
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849