Cilia Are Minuscule Wonders, and Scientists Are Finally Figuring Out How to Mimic Them

2022-07-15 12:39:30
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One tiny flick of a microscopic cellular hair, known as a cilium, can’t do much on its own. But together, these structures routinely pull off biological marvels within the body. Cilia remove inhaled pathogens from the respiratory tract, carry cerebrospinal fluid across brain cavities, transport eggs from the ovary to the uterus, and drain mucus from the middle ear to the nasal cavity. These tiny, extracellular organelles exert precise microfluidic control over life-sustaining liquids in the body. To better understand how these crucial wonders of nature work, scientists have been trying for years to mimic them.

Now researchers have come close to doing so, creating a chip covered with artificial cilia that can precisely control the minuscule flow patterns of fluids. The developers hope this technology will become the basis of new portable diagnostic devices. Currently, many diagnostic lab tests are time-consuming, resource-intensive and demand close human support. A cilia-covered chip, the researchers say, could enable field testing that would be easier, cheaper and more efficient than lab-based tests—as well as using much smaller samples of blood, urine or other testing material.

Humans have achieved spectacular large-scale engineering feats, but “we are still kind of stuck when it comes to engineering miniaturized machines,” says Itai Cohen, a Cornell University physicist and senior author of a new Nature study describing his team’s cilia chip. Researchers had previously tried to make artificial cilia that worked by means of pressure, light, electricity and even magnets. But a major hurdle remained: designing extremely tiny actuators—the motion-triggering parts of a machine—that can be controlled individually or in small clusters rather than all at once.

The Cornell researchers vaulted that hurdle by taking inspiration from some things they learned in their earlier work. In August 2020 Guinness World Records recognized Cohen and his team for designing the world’s smallest walking robot, a machine that was just a fraction of a millimeter wide and could walk on four bendable legs. Much like those legs, the new artificial cilia are made of bendable, nanometer-thin film that can respond to electrical control. Each cilium is one-twentieth of a millimeter long (less than half the length of a dust mite) and 10 nanometers thick—slimmer than the smallest cell organelle—with a strip of platinum on one side and a coating of titanium film on the other.

The key to electrically controlling these artificial cilia comes from their metal makeup. Running a low positive voltage through a cilium triggers a chemical reaction: as a droplet of test fluid flows past, the electrified platinum breaks apart the water molecules within the droplet. This frees up oxygen atoms, which are absorbed into the platinum’s surface. The added oxygen stretches the strip, making it bend in one direction. Once the voltage is reversed, the oxygen is driven out of the platinum—and the cilium returns to its original shape. “So by oscillating the voltage back and forth, you can bend and unbend the strip, which will generate waves to drive the movement,” Cohen says. Meanwhile the electrically inert titanium film stabilizes the structure.

Next, the researchers had to figure out how to pattern a surface with thousands of their artificial cilia. By simply bending and unbending one after the other, these fine strips can drive a microscopic amount of fluid in a set direction. But to direct a droplet to flow in a more complex pattern, the researchers had to divide their chip’s surface into “ciliary units” of a few dozen cilia each—with each unit individually controllable. The Cornell team first planned a control system virtually, collaborating with University of Cambridge researchers to digitally simulate in three dimensions how a droplet would move over a cilia-covered chip.

Once the researchers had used these computer simulations to check out the theoretical aspects of what they were doing, they went on to produce a physical device. Their centimeter-wide chip is carpeted with about a thousand tiny platinum-titanium strips, divided into 16 ciliary units of 64 cilia each. Because each unit is independently connected to a computer control system, individual units can be separately programmed and then coordinated to move the test fluid in any given direction. Working together, the 16 units could thus create near-endless combinations of flow patterns.

The team’s first device can drive droplets in specific patterns, but it is not as efficient as the researchers would like. They are now already planning next-generation chips with cilia that have more than one “hinge.” This will give them more bending ability, “which can allow you to have much more efficient flow of the fluid,” Cohen says.

The study “elegantly enlightened us about how independent, addressable control of artificial cilia arrays could be realized via electronic signals to generate complex programmable microfluidic operations,” says Zuankai Wang, a microfluidics researcher at the City University of Hong Kong, who was not involved in the new study. “Hopefully, the mass production of untethered low-cost diagnostic devices could be within reach in the years to come.”

Because the new technology imitates biological structures, it makes sense to use it in medical applications. The researchers envision a cilia-covered chip as the basis of a diagnostic device that could test any sample of water, blood or urine to find contaminants or markers of disease. A user would place a drop of blood or urine on the chip, and the artificial cilia would carry the sample—along with any chemicals or pathogens within it—from one spot to another, allowing it to mix and react with various testing agents as it moves. Biosensors built into the chip would measure the products of these chemical reactions and then direct the cilia to further manipulate the liquid’s flow, allowing the chip to perform additional tests to confirm the results. “This way, you can do all of the chemistry experiments, in a centimeter-size chip, that would normally happen in a chemistry lab,” Cohen explains. “The chip could also be made to function on its own, as it can use little solar panels fitted on the chip itself.” Such a self-powered device would be ideal for use in the field.

“It’s superb how they have combined microelectronics with fluid mechanics,” says Manoj Chaudhury, a materials scientist at Lehigh University, who was not involved in the new study. The researchers have solved an essential problem, but bringing the resulting product to fruition will require further work, Chaudhury says. “When they design a reactor system to analyze a drop of blood, there have to be local stations where they may even have to heat or cool the sample,” he says. “So it would be interesting to see how they may integrate all these aspects in a micro reactor.”

参考译文
纤毛是微小的奇迹,科学家们终于找到了模仿它们的方法
细胞内一根极微小的纤毛,其本身难以发挥什么作用。但这些结构协同作用时,却能够在体内完成一系列惊人的生物奇迹。纤毛可以将吸入的病原体从呼吸道中清除,将脑脊液输送到大脑腔室,将卵子从卵巢输送到子宫,并将中耳的黏液引流到鼻腔。这些微小的细胞外细胞器能够对维持生命的重要液体实施精确的微流体控制。为了更好地理解这些自然奇观是如何运作的,科学家们多年来一直在努力模仿它们。现在研究人员已经接近实现这一点,他们研制出了一种布满人工纤毛的芯片,能够精确控制流体中的微小流动模式。研发人员希望这项技术能成为新型便携式诊断设备的基础。目前,许多诊断实验检测过程耗时、费力,并且需要大量人力支持。研究人员表示,利用布满纤毛的芯片,可以实现现场检测,这种方法将比实验室检测更容易、更便宜、更高效,同时还能使用非常微量的血液、尿液或其他检测样本。人类已经实现了举世瞩目的大型工程成就,但康奈尔大学的物理学家、也是这项新《自然》研究的资深作者Itai Cohen表示:“但当我们谈到微型机器的制造时,我们目前仍然有所局限。”研究人员曾尝试通过压力、光、电,甚至是磁力的方式制造人工纤毛。但一个关键的难题仍然存在:设计出极其微小的致动器——能够单独或以小集群形式控制的机器运动触发部件。康奈尔大学的研究人员通过借鉴他们在之前工作中学到的一些理念,克服了这一难题。2020年8月,吉尼斯世界纪录承认了Cohen及其团队设计出世界上最小行走机器人的成就,该机器只有毫米级宽度,能够通过四个可弯曲的腿进行行走。正是受到这些腿的启发,新的人工纤毛也由可弯曲的纳米级薄膜制成,能够对电控制作出反应。每根纤毛的长度为毫米的五分之一(不到尘螨长度的一半),厚度为10纳米,比最小的细胞器还要细,一侧镀有铂,另一侧则涂有钛薄膜。控制这些人工纤毛的关键在于它们的金属组成。在纤毛上施加低正电压时,会引发一种化学反应:当测试液体的液滴流过时,被电化的铂会分解液滴中的水分子。这会释放出氧原子,氧原子被吸收进铂的表面,使铂片扩张并弯曲。一旦电压反向,氧原子就会从铂中被排出,纤毛也会恢复原始形状。“因此,通过来回振荡电压,你可以使薄片弯曲和复原,从而产生波浪运动,驱动液体流动。”Cohen解释道。同时,钛薄膜在电化学惰性作用下稳定了结构。接下来,研究人员需要解决的问题是如何在表面上排列成千上万根人工纤毛。这些细小的薄片通过依次弯曲和复原,可以推动一定方向上的微量液体流动。但为了使液滴以更复杂的路径流动,研究人员必须将芯片表面划分为几十根纤毛组成的“纤毛单元”,并且每个单元都可以单独控制。康奈尔大学研究团队首先在虚拟环境中设计了一套控制系统,并与剑桥大学的研究人员合作,三维模拟液滴在布满纤毛芯片上的流动情况。一旦研究人员通过这些计算机模拟验证了他们研究的理论可行性,他们便开始制造物理设备。他们的这种芯片宽约一厘米,表面布满约一千根微小的铂-钛薄片,被划分为16个纤毛单元,每个单元包含64根纤毛。由于每个单元都独立连接到计算机控制系统,因此可以单独编程并协调以使测试液体朝任意方向移动。这16个单元协同工作,从而能够生成几乎无限的流动模式组合。团队研发的第一代设备可以驱动液滴沿特定模式流动,但其效率还不足以令研究人员满意。他们现在已经开始规划新一代芯片,其纤毛将具有多个“铰接点”。这将赋予它们更大的弯曲能力,“从而让液体流动更加高效,”Cohen说道。来自香港城市大学的微流体研究人员Zuankai Wang表示,这项研究“优雅地启发了我们,了解如何通过电子信号实现人工纤毛阵列的独立、可寻址控制,从而生成复杂的可编程微流体操作”。“希望在不久的将来,大量制造无连线的低成本诊断设备将成为可能。”由于这项新技术模仿了生物结构,因此将其用于医学应用是顺理成章的。研究人员设想,布满纤毛的芯片可以成为一种诊断设备的基础,该设备可以检测任何水、血液或尿液样本中的污染物或疾病标志物。用户只需将一滴血或尿液滴在芯片上,人工纤毛就会带动样本——以及其中的任何化学物质或病原体——从一点移动到另一点,从而使其在移动过程中与不同的检测试剂发生混合和反应。嵌入芯片的生物传感器将测量这些化学反应的产物,并引导纤毛进一步操控液体的流动,使芯片能够执行更多检测以确认结果。“这样一来,你就可以在一个厘米大小的芯片上完成通常在化学实验室中进行的所有化学实验,”Cohen解释道。“芯片本身也可以配备太阳能电池板,从而实现自给自足。”这样的自主供电设备非常适合在野外使用。“他们将微电子与流体力学结合得非常出色,”莱高大学的材料科学家Manoj Chaudhury表示,他并未参与这项新研究。Chaudhury表示,研究人员虽然解决了关键问题,但要实现最终的产品,仍需要进一步工作。“当他们设计一个用于分析血滴的反应器系统时,可能需要设置一些局部站点,甚至需要加热或冷却样本,”他说。“因此,看到他们如何在一个微反应器中整合这些所有因素,将非常有趣。”
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