| Literature DB >> 33137770 |
Kyle B Justus1, Tess Hellebrekers2, Daniel D Lewis3, Adam Wood1, Christian Ingham1, Carmel Majidi4,2,5, Philip R LeDuc4,5, Cheemeng Tan6.
Abstract
The integration of synthetic biology and soft robotics can fundamentally advance sensory, diagnostic, and therapeutic functionality of bioinspired machines. However, such integration is currently impeded by the lack of soft-matter architectures that interface synthetic cells with electronics and actuators for controlled stimulation and response during robotic operation. Here, we synthesized a soft gripper that uses engineered bacteria for detecting chemicals in the environment, a flexible light-emitting diode (LED) circuit for converting biological to electronic signals, and soft pneu-net actuators for converting the electronic signals to movement of the gripper. We show that the hybrid bio-LED-actuator module enabled the gripper to detect chemical signals by applying pressure and releasing the contents of a chemical-infused hydrogel. The biohybrid gripper used chemical sensing and feedback to make actionable decisions during a pick-and-place operation. This work opens previously unidentified avenues in soft materials, synthetic biology, and integrated interfacial robotic systems.Year: 2019 PMID: 33137770 DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.aax0765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Robot ISSN: 2470-9476