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      Pollen‐Based Magnetic Microrobots are Mediated by Electrostatic Forces to Attract, Manipulate, and Kill Cancer Cells

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          Abstract

          Naturally occurring micro/nanoparticles provide an incredible array of potential sources when preparing hybrid micro/nanorobots and their intrinsic properties can be exploited as multitasking functionalities of modern robotics as well as ensuring their mass production availability. Herein, magnetic biological bots (BioBots) prepared from defatted sunflower pollen microparticles by ferromagnetic metal layer evaporation on one side of its surface are described. It is demonstrated that the methodology employed introduces magnetic properties to sunflower pollen microparticles‐based BioBots and enable their magnetic actuation. Interestingly, as‐prepared magnetic sunflower pollen‐based BioBots can naturally attract cancer cells due to their opposite charges (positive and negative, respectively). Such attracted cancer cells can then be transported by microrobots. This strong attraction also allows the delivery of drugs intended to kill the cancer cells. Sunflower‐based BioBots can be fabricated in large quantities, and are naturally programmable, making them promising candidates for cancer cell therapy.

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          Most cited references46

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          Catalytic microtubular jet engines self-propelled by accumulated gas bubbles.

          Strain-engineered microtubes with an inner catalytic surface serve as self-propelled microjet engines with speeds of up to approximately 2 mm s(-1) (approximately 50 body lengths per second). The motion of the microjets is caused by gas bubbles ejecting from one opening of the tube, and the velocity can be well approximated by the product of the bubble radius and the bubble ejection frequency. Trajectories of various different geometries are well visualized by long microbubble tails. If a magnetic layer is integrated into the wall of the microjet engine, we can control and localize the trajectories by applying external rotating magnetic fields. Fluid (i.e., fuel) pumping through the microtubes is revealed and directly clarifies the working principle of the catalytic microjet engines.
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            Nano/micromotors in (bio)chemical science applications.

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              Magnetically Driven Micro and Nanorobots

              Manipulation and navigation of micro and nanoswimmers in different fluid environments can be achieved by chemicals, external fields, or even motile cells. Many researchers have selected magnetic fields as the active external actuation source based on the advantageous features of this actuation strategy such as remote and spatiotemporal control, fuel-free, high degree of reconfigurability, programmability, recyclability, and versatility. This review introduces fundamental concepts and advantages of magnetic micro/nanorobots (termed here as “MagRobots”) as well as basic knowledge of magnetic fields and magnetic materials, setups for magnetic manipulation, magnetic field configurations, and symmetry-breaking strategies for effective movement. These concepts are discussed to describe the interactions between micro/nanorobots and magnetic fields. Actuation mechanisms of flagella-inspired MagRobots (i.e., corkscrew-like motion and traveling-wave locomotion/ciliary stroke motion) and surface walkers (i.e., surface-assisted motion), applications of magnetic fields in other propulsion approaches, and magnetic stimulation of micro/nanorobots beyond motion are provided followed by fabrication techniques for (quasi-)spherical, helical, flexible, wire-like, and biohybrid MagRobots. Applications of MagRobots in targeted drug/gene delivery, cell manipulation, minimally invasive surgery, biopsy, biofilm disruption/eradication, imaging-guided delivery/therapy/surgery, pollution removal for environmental remediation, and (bio)sensing are also reviewed. Finally, current challenges and future perspectives for the development of magnetically powered miniaturized motors are discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Advanced Functional Materials
                Adv Funct Materials
                Wiley
                1616-301X
                1616-3028
                November 2022
                September 02 2022
                November 2022
                : 32
                : 46
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Center for Advanced Functional Nanorobots Department of Inorganic Chemistry University of Chemistry and Technology Prague Technicka 5 166 28 Prague Czech Republic
                [2 ]Department of Pathological Physiology Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Kamenice 5 625 00 Brno Czech Republic
                [3 ]School of Materials Science and Engineering Nanyang Technological University 50 Nanyang Avenue Singapore 639798 Singapore
                [4 ]Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science VSB – Technical University of Ostrava 17. listopadu 2172/15 70800 Ostrava Czech Republic
                [5 ]Department of Medical Research China Medical University Hospital China Medical University No. 91 Hsueh‐Shih Road Taichung 40402 Taiwan
                Article
                10.1002/adfm.202207272
                aa3a995c-a8d3-4b19-90d3-c1502bcde782
                © 2022

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