4.8 Article

A tissue-engineered jellyfish with biomimetic propulsion

Journal

NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 8, Pages 792-797

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nbt.2269

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Funding

  1. Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard
  2. Harvard Materials Research Science and Engineering Center under National Science Foundation [DMR-0213805]
  3. US National Institutes of Health [1 R01 HL079126]
  4. office of Naval Research
  5. National Science Foundation Program in Fluid Dynamics

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Reverse engineering of biological form and function requires hierarchical design over several orders of space and time. Recent advances in the mechanistic understanding of biosynthetic compound materials(1-3), computer-aided design approaches in molecular synthetic biology(4,5) and traditional soft robotics(6,7), and increasing aptitude in generating structural and chemical microenvironments that promote cellular self-organization(8-10) have enhanced the ability to recapitulate such hierarchical architecture in engineered biological systems. Here we combined these capabilities in a systematic design strategy to reverse engineer a muscular pump. We report the construction of a freely swimming jellyfish from chemically dissociated rat tissue and silicone polymer as a proof of concept. The constructs, termed 'medusoids', were designed with computer simulations and experiments to match key determinants of jellyfish propulsion and feeding performance by quantitatively mimicking structural design, stroke kinematics and animal-fluid interactions. The combination of the engineering design algorithm with quantitative benchmarks of physiological performance suggests that our strategy is broadly applicable to reverse engineering of muscular organs or simple life forms that pump to survive.

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