Synthetic and living micropropellers for convection-enhanced nanoparticle transport.

Schuerle S
Soleimany AP
Yeh T
Anand GM
Häberli M
Fleming HE
Qiu F
Hauert S
Wang X
Nelson BJ
Bhatia SN
Scientific Abstract

Nanoparticles (NPs) have emerged as an advantageous drug delivery platform for the treatment of various ailments including cancer and cardiovascular and inflammatory diseases. However, their efficacy in shuttling materials to diseased tissue is hampered by a number of physiological barriers. One hurdle is transport out of the blood vessels, compounded by difficulties in subsequent penetration into the target tissue. Here, we report the use of two distinct micropropellers powered by rotating magnetic fields to increase diffusion-limited NP transport by enhancing local fluid convection. In the first approach, we used a single synthetic magnetic microrobot called an artificial bacterial flagellum (ABF), and in the second approach, we used swarms of magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) to create a directable "living ferrofluid" by exploiting ferrohydrodynamics. Both approaches enhance NP transport in a microfluidic model of blood extravasation and tissue penetration that consists of microchannels bordered by a collagen matrix.

Citation
2019. Sci Adv, 5(4)eaav4803.
DOI
10.1126/sciadv.aav4803
Related Content
Paper
Author
Aron AR
Herz DM
Brown P
Forstmann BU
Zaghloul KA

2016.J. Neurosci., 36(45):11489-11495.

Paper
Author
di Biase L
Brittain JS
Brown P
Di Lazzaro V
Shah SA
2018. WO/2018/134579
Paper
Author
Harmer CJ
Klein-Flügge MC

2025. Brain Neurosci Adv, 9:23982128251322241.