A Laser‐Driven Microrobot for Thermal Stimulation of Single Cells

Author:

Harder Philipp123,İyisan Nergishan123,Wang Chen123,Kohler Fabian34,Neb Irina5,Lahm Harald5,Dreßen Martina5,Krane Markus67,Dietz Hendrik34,Özkale Berna123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Microrobotic Bioengineering Lab (MRBL) School of Computation Information and Technology Technical University of Munich Hans‐Piloty‐Straße 1 85748 Garching Germany

2. Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence Technical University of Munich Georg‐Brauchle‐Ring 60 80992 Munich Germany

3. Munich Institute of Biomedical Engineering Technical University of Munich Boltzmannstraße 11 85748 Garching Germany

4. Laboratory for Biomolecular Nanotechnology School of Natural Sciences Technical University of Munich Am Coulombwall 4a 85748 Garching Germany

5. Institute for Translational Cardiac Surgery (INSURE) Department of Cardiovascular Surgery German Heart Center Technical University of Munich 80636 Munich Germany

6. Division of Cardiac Surgery Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06510 USA

7. DZHK (German Center for Cardiovascular Research) Partner site Munich Heart Alliance 80802 Munich Germany

Abstract

AbstractHere, the study presents a thermally activated cell‐signal imaging (TACSI) microrobot, capable of photothermal actuation, sensing, and light‐driven locomotion. The plasmonic soft microrobot is specifically designed for thermal stimulation of mammalian cells to investigate cell behavior under heat active conditions. Due to the integrated thermosensitive fluorescence probe, Rhodamine B, the system allows dynamic measurement of induced temperature changes. TACSI microrobots show excellent biocompatibility over 72 h in vitro, and they are capable of thermally activating single cells to cell clusters. Locomotion in a 3D workspace is achieved by relying on thermophoretic convection, and the microrobot speed is controlled within a range of 5–65 µm s−1. In addition, light‐driven actuation enables spatiotemporal control of the microrobot temperature up to a maximum of 60 °C. Using TACSI microrobots, this study targets single cells within a large population, and demonstrates thermal cell stimulation using calcium signaling as a biological output. Initial studies with human embryonic kidney 293 cells indicate a dose dependent change in intracellular calcium content within the photothermally controlled temperature range of 37–57 °C.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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