| Literature DB >> 35806570 |
Petteri Piskunen1, Martina Huusela1, Veikko Linko1,2.
Abstract
Nanoswimmers are synthetic nanoscale objects that convert the available surrounding free energy to a directed motion. For example, bacteria with various flagella types serve as textbook examples of the minuscule swimmers found in nature. Along these lines, a plethora of artificial hybrid and non-hybrid nanoswimmers have been introduced, and they could find many uses, e.g., for targeted drug delivery systems (TDDSs) and controlled drug treatments. Here, we discuss a certain class of nanoparticles, i.e., functional, capped Janus nanospheres that can be employed as nanoswimmers, their subclasses and properties, as well as their various implementations. A brief outlook is given on different fabrication and synthesis methods, as well as on the diverse compositions used to prepare nanoswimmers, with a focus on the particle types and materials suitable for biomedical applications. Several recent studies have shown remarkable success in achieving temporally and spatially controlled drug delivery in vitro using Janus-particle-based TDDSs. We believe that this review will serve as a concise introductory synopsis for the interested readers. Therefore, we hope that it will deepen the general understanding of nanoparticle behavior in biological matrices.Entities:
Keywords: Janus particles; biohybrids; biomedicine; nanofabrication; nanospheres; nanoswimmers; targeted delivery
Year: 2022 PMID: 35806570 PMCID: PMC9267829 DOI: 10.3390/ma15134442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Figure 1Artistic rendering of the theme of this review. Capped Janus nanospheres can be fabricated, for example, on a supporting substrate and further resuspended in solution. Upon the introduction of a chosen external field or fuel, the nanospheres elicit a directional movement.
Figure 2The three main mechanisms of Janus particle fabrication, illustrated with selected examples. (a) Masking: electron beam evaporation or sputtering can be used to deposit material on surface-attached spheres. (b) Phase separation: phase boundaries (here, water–wax interface) can be used to direct assembly. (c) Self-assembly: For example, copolymers can be selectively cross-linked and then disassembled to yield Janus spheres. (a) reproduced from Ref. [45]. Copyright 2017 American Chemical Society. (b) reproduced from Ref. [46]. Copyright 2009 Elsevier. (c) reproduced from Ref. [47]. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society.
Figure 3Non-hybrid swimmers made from Janus spheres. (a) Left: a metal cap on silica beads induces a magnetic response. Right: magnetic moments in the metal cap at remanence after magnetic saturation. (b) Partially coating a particle with magnetostrictive and piezoelectric layers enables dual functions in controlled motion and localized chemical reactions. (c) A platinum cap on mesoporous silica enables catalysis-based fuel-free propulsion of a drug-loaded particle. (d) Morphological differences in coating affect the swimming behavior of particles. (e) Photothermally driven Au-capped silica spheres respond at near-infrared light wavelengths close to the surface plasmon resonance of the coating. (f) Mg nanospheres half-coated with a Fe/Au bilayer and topped with bactericidal Ag nanoparticles form multifunctional swimmers for water remediation. (a) reproduced from Ref. [49]. Copyright 2012 American Chemical Society. (b) reproduced from Ref. [50]. Copyright 2016 Royal Society of Chemistry. (c) reproduced from Ref. [47]. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society. (d) reproduced from Ref. [51]. Copyright 2021 American Chemical Society. (e) reproduced from Ref. [52]. Copyright 2016 American Chemical Society. (f) reproduced from Ref. [45]. Copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 4Hybrid nanoswimmers. (a) Silica nanosphere partially coated with catalase enables propulsion through enzymatic reactions. (b) Hollow mesoporous silica nanosphere partially coated with urease enzymes, which enables urea-fueled propulsion and toggling of movement by chemically inhibiting and reactivating the enzyme. (c) Coating a platelet cell with urease allows creation of a cell-based urea-fueled swimmer. (d) E. coli attached to capped Janus spheres provide random tumble motion to the particles, but the system can also be magnetically steered if a magnetic metal (Fe) is used for coating. (e) DNA origami nanoring that can be used for creating self-thermophoretic Janus-type assemblies. (f) Magnetic nanoswimmer with synthetic DNA origami flagella. denotes the magnetic flux density. (a) reproduced from Ref. [74]. Copyright 2017 Elsevier. (b) reproduced from Ref. [75]. Copyright 2016 American Chemical Society. (c) reproduced from Ref. [48]. Copyright 2020 by American Association for the Advancement of Science. (d) reproduced from Ref. [70]. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society. (e) reproduced from Ref. [76]. Copyright 2018 John Wiley & Sons. (f) reproduced from Ref. [77]. Copyright 2016 American Chemical Society.
Nanoswimmers classified by their type, composition, mechanism and foreseen applications.
| Swimmer Type | Composition | Mechanism | Application |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Multilayer magnetic/catalytic swimmer [ | Co/Pt multilayer on SiO | H | Studying swimming behavior |
| Magnetoresponsive swimmer [ | CoFe | Charge generation via interaction of magnetostrictive and piezoelectric layers | Remote controlling/triggering electrochemical reactions |
| Catalytic swimmer [ | Pt on mesoporous SiO | Pt catalyzed H | Drug delivery |
| Fuel-free photocatalytic swimmer [ | Au coated TiO | UV-light driven self-electrophoresis | Illumination controlled propulsion |
| Photochemically driven swimmer [ | Cu on TiO | UV light or H | Studying swimming and interactions between passive and active colloids |
| Photochemically driven swimmers [ | Various metals on TiO | UV light and H | Studying effects of coating material on swimmer propulsion |
| Two-directional photoresponsive swimmer [ | Au-capped TiO | Switch in reaction site (Au to TiO | Reversible propulsion direction |
| Nanocube and platelet-coated swimmers [ | Co | UV-light-driven photocatalytic/self-electrophoretic propulsion | Studying effects of coating morphology on swimming |
| Photochemically driven polymer-cored swimmer [ | AgCl on PMMA | UV-and-visible-light-driven decomposition of AgCl to Ag | Studying ionic self-diffusiophoresis |
| Photothermal swimmer [ | Au on SiO | Light-induced thermal gradient between cap and uncoated half | Fuel-free light-controlled propulsion |
| Magnetothermal swimmer [ | Permalloy on SiO | Asymmetric heating of particle with AC magnetic field, steering with DC magnetic field | Magnetic steering and propulsion |
| Multilayered antibacterial swimmer [ | Ag on Au on Fe on Mg | Mg-based propulsion, magnetic guidance and collection, bacterial adhesion and Ag release | Killing and collecting bacteria in water |
| Photocatalytic magnetic swimmer [ | Ni and Au on TiO | UV-driven propulsion, magnetic reclaiming | Herding, aggregating and collecting passive colloidal species in solution |
| Galvanic exchange swimmers [ | Metal coating on SiO | Galvanic exchange of partial coating with more noble metal in solution induces an electromotive force | Capping synthesis and material exchange, switching of propulsion mechanism |
| Liquid metal alloy swimmers [ | Capped liquid metal core | Self-diffusiophoresis (non-metallic) or self-electrophoresis (metal) depending on cap material | Propulsion in alkaline environments, biocompatible and bactericidal swimmers, microwelding |
|
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| Catalase swimmer [ | SiO | H | Biocatalytic propulsion, drug delivery |
| Hollow-cored urease swimmer [ | Urease-coated mesoporous SiO | Propulsion via urea decomposition, magnetic steering (with Fe cap), cargo space within particle | Controlled enzymatic swimming, delivery of large-particle cargo |
| Cell-membrane-coated swimmer [ | Au-capped SiO | Thermophoretic propulsion, cloaking and cell-specific targeting due to cell membrane coating | Immunological cloaking, cancer cell targeting, assisted cell membrane penetration |
| Capped platelet cells [ | Urease-capped platelet cells | Urea-fueled propulsion, retained cell functionality | Harnessing of cells as nanoswimmers |
| Random tumble motion of | Fuel-free random or directed propulsion, drug delivery | ||
| Biosensor swimmer [ | MoS | Catalytic propulsion, magnetic steering and collecting, peptide release and light emission upon encountering target endotoxin | On/off-type species-selective biosensor for bacteria detection |
|
| |||
| Thermophoretic DNA origami swimmers [ | Custom DNA origami structures on Au particles | Propulsion via asymmetric heating during illumination | Platform for thermophoretic swimmers with adjustable behavior |
| Magnetic swimmers with DNA origami tails [ | DNA origami flagella conjugated to Au-capped magnetic beads | Flagella-mediated propulsion during magnetic rotation of beads | Custom engineering of movement behavior |