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Plot and go: Researchers plot a trajectory for their bacteria-powered microrobots, which are guided using an MRI machine.
The NanoRobotics Laboratory, École Polytechnique de Montréal (EPM)
Self-propelled microbots navigate through blood vessels.
The 1966 science-fiction movie Fantastic Voyage famously imagined using a tiny ship to combat disease inside the body. With the advent of nanotechnology, researchers are inching closer to creating something almost as fantastic. A microscopic device that could swim through the bloodstream and directly target the site of disease, such as a tumor, could offer radical new treatments. To get to a tumor, however, such a device would have to be small and agile enough to navigate through a labyrinth of tiny blood vessels, some far thinner than a human hair.
Researchers at the École Polytechnique de Montréal, in Canada, led by professor of computer engineering Sylvain Martel, have coupled live, swimming bacteria to microscopic beads to develop a self-propelling device, dubbed a nanobot. While other scientists have previously attached bacteria to microscopic particles to take advantage of their natural propelling motion, Martel's team is the first to show that such hybrids can be steered through the body using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
To do this, Martel used bacteria that naturally contain magnetic particles. In nature, these particles help the bacteria navigate toward deeper water, away from oxygen. "Those nanoparticles form a chain a bit like a magnetic compass needle," says Martel. But by changing the surrounding magnetic field using an extended set-up coupled to an MRI machine, Martel and his colleagues were able to make the bacteria propel themselves in any direction they wanted.
The bacteria swim using tiny corkscrewlike tails, or flagella, and these particular bacteria are faster and stronger than most, says Martel. What's more, they are just two microns in diameter--small enough to fit through the smallest blood vessels in the human body. The team treated the polymer beads roughly 150 nanometers in size with antibodies so that the bacteria would attach to them. Ultimately, the researchers plan to modify the beads so that they also carry cancer-killing drugs.
"I think nature has provided an excellent solution to how to make small things swim," says Bradley Nelson, a professor at ETH Zurich, who has researched the use of artificial flagella. "What's interesting about Sylvain's work is that he's actually using nature to do it and not just learning from it."
Last year, Martel and his group published research in the journal Applied Physics Letters detailing how they used an MRI machine to maneuver a 1.5-millimeter magnetic bead with a bacteria propeller through the carotid artery of a living pig at 10 centimeters per second. The researchers' latest work, presented at the IEEE 2008 Biorobotics Conference last week, shows that they can track and steer microbeads and bacteria or bacteria alone through a replica of human blood vessels using the same approach. The group has carried out similar experiments in rats and rabbits, according to Martel.
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This document is part of the “How-To Guide for Most Common Measurements” centralized resource portal. This tutorial provides a detailed guide for measurement and device considerations to take temperature measurements using thermocouples. Get an introduction to thermocouples, which are inexpensive sensing devices widely used with PC-based data acquisition systems. Also review some specific thermocouple examples and learn how thermocouples work and ways to integrate them into a data acquisition measurement system.
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biomed_dave
1 Comment
introduce infection?
"the immune system has not encountered these bacteria before" - any precautions being taken to ensure that these bacterial don't lead to infection? That is tough to predict and potentially very dangerous...
Reply
mergatroid
24 Comments
Re: introduce infection?
Damn the torpedoes, Dave. Full speed ahead!
If something does go awry, you correctly predicting something would go wrong were there to profit from the solution. Can't stop this train.
Reply
Tomek
3 Comments
Re: introduce infection?
If they say that our immune system hasn't encountered these bacteria before, it means that we have never been an object of interest for this particular specie and that it would be very hard for these bacteria to settle down in an environment that is very different from what they are adapted to. It's not that easy to attack such a well defended system if you are not prepared by millions of years of coevolution, even if you are a bacteria;)
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westzorf
1 Comment
Re: introduce infection?
Good article and comment! I agree the risk is low, but just in case couldn't the motile beasties be made to be particularly susceptible to a bacteriophage, harmless to humans, which could be released if things went horribly wrong.
Prehaps even select a mutant with two flagella, like a Grady-White center console (=2 outboards), for more horse - er uhm, bug-power.
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