Biohybrid robots built from living tissue start to take shape
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Think of a traditional robot and you probably imagine something made
from metal and plastic. Such “nuts-and-bolts” robots are made of hard
materials. As robots take on more roles beyond the lab, such rigid
systems can present safety risks to the people they interact with. For
example, if an industrial robot swings into a person, there is the risk
of bruises or bone damage.
Researchers are increasingly looking for solutions to make robots
softer or more compliant – less like rigid machines, more like animals.
With traditional actuators – such as motors – this can mean using air muscles or adding springs in parallel with motors. For example, on a Whegs robot,
having a spring between a motor and the wheel leg (Wheg) means that if
the robot runs into something (like a person), the spring absorbs some
of the energy so the person isn’t hurt. The bumper on a Roomba vacuuming
robot is another example; it’s spring-loaded so the Roomba doesn’t
damage the things it bumps into.
But there’s a growing area of research that’s taking a different
approach. By combining robotics with tissue engineering, we’re starting
to build robots powered by living muscle tissue or cells. These devices
can be stimulated electrically or with light to make the cells contract
to bend their skeletons, causing the robot to swim or crawl. The
resulting biobots can move around and are soft like animals. They’re
safer around people and typically less harmful to the environment they
work in than a traditional robot might be. And since, like animals, they
need nutrients to power their muscles, not batteries, biohybrid robots
tend to be lighter too.
Tissue-engineered biobots on titanium molds.
Karaghen Hudson and Sung-Jin Park, CC BY-ND
Building a biobot
Researchers fabricate biobots by growing living cells, usually from
heart or skeletal muscle of rats or chickens, on scaffolds that are
nontoxic to the cells. If the substrate is a polymer, the device created
is a biohybrid robot – a hybrid between natural and human-made
materials.
If you just place cells on a molded skeleton without any guidance,
they wind up in random orientations. That means when researchers apply
electricity to make them move, the cells' contraction forces will be
applied in all directions, making the device inefficient at best.
So to better harness the cells' power, researchers turn to
micropatterning. We stamp or print microscale lines on the skeleton made
of substances that the cells prefer to attach to. These lines guide the
cells so that as they grow, they align along the printed pattern. With
the cells all lined up, researchers can direct how their contraction
force is applied to the substrate. So rather than just a mess of firing
cells, they can all work in unison to move a leg or fin of the device.
Tissue-engineered soft robotic ray that’s controlled with light.
Karaghen Hudson and Michael Rosnach, CC BY-ND
Biohybrid robots inspired by animals
Beyond a wide array of biohybrid robots, researchers have even
created some completely organic robots using natural materials, like the
collagen in skin, rather than polymers for the body of the device. Some can crawl or swim when stimulated by an electric field. Some take inspiration from medical tissue engineering techniques and use long rectangular arms (or cantilevers) to pull themselves forward.
Others have taken their cues from nature, creating biologically
inspired biohybrids. For example, a group led by researchers at
California Institute of Technology developed a biohybrid robot inspired by jellyfish.
This device, which they call a medusoid, has arms arranged in a circle.
Each arm is micropatterned with protein lines so that cells grow in
patterns similar to the muscles in a living jellyfish. When the cells
contract, the arms bend inwards, propelling the biohybrid robot forward
in nutrient-rich liquid.
More recently, researchers have demonstrated how to steer their
biohybrid creations. A group at Harvard used genetically modified heart
cells to make a biologically inspired manta ray-shaped robot
swim. The heart cells were altered to contract in response to specific
frequencies of light – one side of the ray had cells that would respond
to one frequency, the other side’s cells responded to another.
When the researchers shone light on the front of the robot, the cells
there contracted and sent electrical signals to the cells further along
the manta ray’s body. The contraction would propagate down the robot’s
body, moving the device forward. The researchers could make the robot
turn to the right or left by varying the frequency of the light they
used. If they shone more light of the frequency the cells on one side
would respond to, the contractions on that side of the manta ray would
be stronger, allowing the researchers to steer the robot’s movement.
Toughening up the biobots
While exciting developments have been made in the field of biohybrid
robotics, there’s still significant work to be done to get the devices
out of the lab. Devices currently have limited lifespans and low force
outputs, limiting their speed and ability to complete tasks. Robots made
from mammalian or avian cells are very picky about their environmental
conditions. For example, the ambient temperature must be near biological
body temperature and the cells require regular feeding with
nutrient-rich liquid. One possible remedy is to package the devices so
that the muscle is protected from the external environment and
constantly bathed in nutrients.
The sea slug Aplysia californica.
Jeff Gill, CC BY-ND
Another option is to use more robust cells as actuators. Here at Case
Western Reserve University, we’ve recently begun to investigate this
possibility by turning to the hardy marine sea slug Aplysia californica. Since A. californica
lives in the intertidal region, it can experience big changes in
temperature and environmental salinity over the course of a day. When
the tide goes out, the sea slugs can get trapped in tide pools. As the
sun beats down, water can evaporate and the temperature will rise.
Conversely in the event of rain, the saltiness of the surrounding water
can decrease. When the tide eventually comes in, the sea slugs are freed
from the tidal pools. Sea slugs have evolved very hardy cells to endure
this changeable habitat.
Sea turtle-inspired biohybrid robot, powered by muscle from the sea slug.
Dr. Andrew Horchler, CC BY-ND
We’ve been able to use Aplysia tissue to actuate a biohybrid robot,
suggesting that we can manufacture tougher biobots using these
resilient tissues. The devices are large enough to carry a small payload
– approximately 1.5 inches long and one inch wide.
A further challenge in developing biobots is that currently the
devices lack any sort of on-board control system. Instead, engineers
control them via external electrical fields or light. In order to
develop completely autonomous biohybrid devices, we’ll need controllers
that interface directly with the muscle and provide sensory inputs to
the biohybrid robot itself. One possibility is to use neurons or
clusters of neurons called ganglia as organic controllers.
That’s another reason we’re excited about using Aplysia in our lab. This sea slug has been a model system for neurobiology research for decades.
A great deal is already known about the relationships between its
neural system and its muscles – opening the possibility that we could
use its neurons as organic controllers that could tell the robot which
way to move and help it perform tasks, such as finding toxins or
following a light.
While the field is still in its infancy, researchers envision many
intriguing applications for biohybrid robots. For example, our tiny
devices using slug tissue could be released as swarms into water
supplies or the ocean to seek out toxins or leaking pipes. Due to the
biocompatibility of the devices, if they break down or are eaten by
wildlife these environmental sensors theoretically wouldn’t pose the
same threat to the environment traditional nuts-and-bolts robots would.
One day, devices could be fabricated from human cells and used for
medical applications. Biobots could provide targeted drug delivery,
clean up clots or serve as compliant actuatable stents. By using organic
substrates rather than polymers, such stents could be used to
strengthen weak blood vessels to prevent aneurysms – and over time the
device would be remodeled and integrated into the body. Beyond the
small-scale biohybrid robots currently being developed, ongoing research
in tissue engineering, such as attempts to grow vascular systems, may
open the possibility of growing large-scale robots actuated by muscle.
Source: http://theconversation.com/biohybrid-robots-built-from-living-tissue-start-to-take-shape-62759