Wirelessly controllable bioelectronic
neuromuscular robots for steering actuation behavior. (A) Dynamic control of
the heart via the neural innervation of cardiomyocytes (CMs). (B) Schematic of
a bioelectronic neuromuscular robot with selective motor innervation of CMs
driven by a wireless frequency multiplexing bioelectronic device. Credit:
Hiroyuki Tetsuka
A
combined team of bio researchers and roboticists from Brigham and Women's
Hospital, in the U.S., and the iPrint Institute, in Switzerland, has developed
a tiny swimming robot using human motor neurons and cardiomyocytes grown to
emulate muscle tissue.
Their paper is published in the journal Science
Robotics. Nicole Xu, a mechanical engineer at the University of Colorado Boulder, has
published a Focus piece in
the same journal issue outlining ongoing work to create bioinspired robots
using animal tissue.
For many years, science fiction writers
and movie makers have used the idea of combining electronics, computers and
animal tissue to create robots with unique and sometimes terrifying attributes.
In the real world, Xu describes such work as ongoing.
Animals, including humans, have
abilities that far surpass anything robots can do. Doing laundry, for example,
requires a myriad of skills, including sorting dirty clothes, choosing washer
and dryer settings, and folding or hanging clothes.
Such activities require both dexterity and mental processing. Because of that, roboticists are exploring the development of biohybrid robots. The research team created a ray-like swimming robot with a computer brain that controls human muscle cells activated by human motor neurons.
Credit: Hiroyuki Tetsuka
To create the robot, the
researchers cultured both motor neurons and cardiomyocytes that were produced using human pluripotent stem
cells. The cardiomyocytes were programmed to grow into muscle cell tissue on a
scaffolding that resembled ray fins in a way that allowed them to junction with
the motor neurons.
This allowed for the creation of electrical synapses. Some of the motor neurons were then connected to an electronic processor that served as the robot's brain. It housed Wi-Fi circuitry that transferred signals from human controllers to either the left or right fin, or both.
Fabrication process for the flexible
PCB-based wireless bi-frequency bioelectronic device. Credit: Hiroyuki Tetsuka
In
this way, the researchers were able to control the movement of their robot,
eventually giving it the ability to swim.
Over time, the research team found they could maneuver the robot with precision, including making sharp turns. They also found they could make it swim at speeds of up to 0.52 ± 0.22 mm/s.
by Bob Yirka , Tech Xplore
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