Photohermal Microswimmer Penetrate Cell Membrane with Cavitation Bubble

Self-propelled micromotors can efficiently convert ambient energy into mechanical motion, which is of great interest for its potential biomedical applications in delivering therapeutics noninvasively. However, navigating these micromotors through biological barriers remains a significant challenge a...

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Main Authors Zeng, Binglin, Lai, Jialin, Chen, Jingyuan, Huang, Yaxin, Wu, Changjin, Huang, Chao, Guo, Qingxin, Li, Xiaofeng, Li, Shuai, Tang, Jinyao
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 18.06.2024
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Summary:Self-propelled micromotors can efficiently convert ambient energy into mechanical motion, which is of great interest for its potential biomedical applications in delivering therapeutics noninvasively. However, navigating these micromotors through biological barriers remains a significant challenge as most micromotors do not provide sufficient disruption forces in in-vivo conditions. In this study, we employed focused scanning laser from conventional confocal microscope to manipulate carbon microbottle based microswimmers. With the increasing of the laser power, the microswimmers' motions translates from autonomous to directional, and finally the high power laser induced the microswimmer explosions, which effectively deliveres microbottle fragments through the cell membrane. It is revealed that photothermally-induced cavitation bubbles enable the propulsion of microbottles in liquids, where the motion direction can be precisely regulated by the scanning orientation of the laser. Furthermore, the membrane penetration ability of the microbottles promised potential applications in drug delivery and cellular injections. As microbottles navigate toward cells, we strategically increase the laser power to trigger their explosion. By loading microswimmers with transfection genes, cytoplasmic transfection can be realized, which is demonstrated by successful gene transfection of GPF in cells. Our findings open new possibilities for cell injection and gene transfection using micromotors.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2406.12522