Magnetically steerable bacterial microrobots moving in 3D biological matrices for stimuli-responsive cargo delivery

Author:

Akolpoglu Mukrime Birgul12ORCID,Alapan Yunus1ORCID,Dogan Nihal Olcay12ORCID,Baltaci Saadet Fatma13ORCID,Yasa Oncay1ORCID,Aybar Tural Gulsen14ORCID,Sitti Metin125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Physical Intelligence Department, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany.

2. Institute for Biomedical Engineering, ETH-Zürich, Zürich 8092, Switzerland.

3. Stuttgart Center for Simulation Science (SC SimTech), University of Stuttgart, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany.

4. Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty of Pharmacy, Ege University, 35040 Izmir, Turkey.

5. School of Medicine and College of Engineering, Koç University, 34450 Istanbul, Turkey.

Abstract

Bacterial biohybrids, composed of self-propelling bacteria carrying micro/nanoscale materials, can deliver their payload to specific regions under magnetic control, enabling additional frontiers in minimally invasive medicine. However, current bacterial biohybrid designs lack high-throughput and facile construction with favorable cargoes, thus underperforming in terms of propulsion, payload efficiency, tissue penetration, and spatiotemporal operation. Here, we report magnetically controlled bacterial biohybrids for targeted localization and multistimuli-responsive drug release in three-dimensional (3D) biological matrices. Magnetic nanoparticles and nanoliposomes loaded with photothermal agents and chemotherapeutic molecules were integrated ontoEscherichia coliwith ~90% efficiency. Bacterial biohybrids, outperforming previously reportedE. coli–based microrobots, retained their original motility and were able to navigate through biological matrices and colonize tumor spheroids under magnetic fields for on-demand release of the drug molecules by near-infrared stimulus. Our work thus provides a multifunctional microrobotic platform for guided locomotion in 3D biological networks and stimuli-responsive delivery of therapeutics for diverse medical applications.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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