High‐Yield Production of Biohybrid Microalgae for On‐Demand Cargo Delivery

Biohybrid microswimmers exploit the swimming and navigation of a motile microorganism to target and deliver cargo molecules in a wide range of biomedical applications. Medical biohybrid microswimmers suffer from low manufacturing yields, which would significantly limit their potential applications....

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced science 2020-08, Vol.7 (16), p.2001256-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Akolpoglu, Mukrime Birgul, Dogan, Nihal Olcay, Bozuyuk, Ugur, Ceylan, Hakan, Kizilel, Seda, Sitti, Metin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Biohybrid microswimmers exploit the swimming and navigation of a motile microorganism to target and deliver cargo molecules in a wide range of biomedical applications. Medical biohybrid microswimmers suffer from low manufacturing yields, which would significantly limit their potential applications. In the present study, a biohybrid design strategy is reported, where a thin and soft uniform coating layer is noncovalently assembled around a motile microorganism. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (a single‐cell green alga) is used in the design as a biological model microorganism along with polymer–nanoparticle matrix as the synthetic component, reaching a manufacturing efficiency of ≈90%. Natural biopolymer chitosan is used as a binder to efficiently coat the cell wall of the microalgae with nanoparticles. The soft surface coating does not impair the viability and phototactic ability of the microalgae, and allows further engineering to accommodate biomedical cargo molecules. Furthermore, by conjugating the nanoparticles embedded in the thin coating with chemotherapeutic doxorubicin by a photocleavable linker, on‐demand delivery of drugs to tumor cells is reported as a proof‐of‐concept biomedical demonstration. The high‐throughput strategy can pave the way for the next‐generation generation microrobotic swarms for future medical active cargo delivery tasks. Algal microrobots, using green microalgae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, are constructed with polymer–nanoparticle matrix coating. This design strategy has a high manufacturing yield of around 90%. Furthermore, a model chemotherapeutic drug (doxorubicin) is conjugated to the nanoparticles embedded in the thin coating and on‐demand light‐triggered drug release to cancer cells is demonstrated as a proof‐of‐concept.
ISSN:2198-3844
2198-3844
DOI:10.1002/advs.202001256