4.8 Article

Biohybrid Variable-Stiffness Soft Actuators that Self-Create Bone

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202107345

Keywords

actuators; biohybrids; mineralization; variable stiffness

Funding

  1. Japanese Society of the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Bridge Fellowship program [BR170502]
  2. KAKENHI [JP20H04534]
  3. Swedish Research Council [VR2014-3079]
  4. Promobilia [F17603]
  5. China Scholarship Council [201808330454]
  6. JSPS [JPJSBP 120 209 923]
  7. STINT, The Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education [MG2019-8171]

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Inspired by initial bone development, bioinduced variable-stiffness actuators are fabricated, optimized, and characterized in this study. These actuators can morph in shape and change from soft to rigid, with the ability to promote mineralization for bone tissue integration.
Inspired by the dynamic process of initial bone development, in which a soft tissue turns into a solid load-bearing structure, the fabrication, optimization, and characterization of bioinduced variable-stiffness actuators that can morph in various shapes and change their properties from soft to rigid are hereby presented. Bilayer devices are prepared by combining the electromechanically active properties of polypyrrole with the compliant behavior of alginate gels that are uniquely functionalized with cell-derived plasma membrane nanofragments (PMNFs), previously shown to mineralize within 2 days, which promotes the mineralization in the gel layer to achieve the soft to stiff change by growing their own bone. The mineralized actuator shows an evident frozen state compared to the movement before mineralization. Next, patterned devices show programmed directional and fixated morphing. These variable-stiffness devices can wrap around and, after the PMNF-induced mineralization in and on the gel layer, adhere and integrate onto bone tissue. The developed biohybrid variable-stiffness actuators can be used in soft (micro-)robotics and as potential tools for bone repair or bone tissue engineering.

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