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      Enhancing and Decoding the Performance of Muscle Actuators with Flexures

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          Abstract

          Leveraging living muscle as an efficient and adaptive actuator for soft robots has been of increasing interest over the past decade, with a focus on proof‐of‐concept demonstrations of function. Reproducible design and scalable manufacturing of biohybrid machines requires methods to increase the stroke output of strain‐limited muscle actuators and enable accurate and precise quality control and performance monitoring. Compliant mechanical elements, termed flexures, are designed to enhance muscle contractile stroke to ≈5× previously reported values and decode contraction dynamics with high spatiotemporal resolution. Combining rigid and flexible elements within a linear elastic flexure enables us to outperform the sensitivity of gold standard elastomeric beam‐based measurements of muscle contraction at both low‐ and high‐frequency stimulations. Flexures are leveraged to make quantitative comparisons of force, work, and power outputs in muscle actuators, driving us to discover a new observation of frequency‐dependent fatigue in muscle, and also develop a novel method for tuning muscle contractile dynamics in a frequency‐independent manner. By enhancing the contractile stroke of muscle actuators and precisely tuning contractile dynamics and endurance with unprecedented precision, this study sets the stage for leveraging flexures to improve robust, reproducible, and predictive design and manufacturing of next‐generation biohybrid robots.

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          Most cited references50

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          Untethered soft robotics

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            Synthetic alternatives to Matrigel

            Matrigel, a basement-membrane matrix extracted from Engelbreth–Holm–Swarm mouse sarcomas, has been used for more than four decades for a myriad of cell culture applications. However, Matrigel is limited in its applicability to cellular biology, therapeutic cell manufacturing and drug discovery owing to its complex, ill-defined and variable composition. Variations in the mechanical and biochemical properties within a single batch of Matrigel — and between batches — have led to uncertainty in cell culture experiments and a lack of reproducibility. Moreover, Matrigel is not conducive to physical or biochemical manipulation, making it difficult to fine-tune the matrix to promote intended cell behaviours and achieve specific biological outcomes. Recent advances in synthetic scaffolds have led to the development of xenogenic-free, chemically defined, highly tunable and reproducible alternatives. In this Review, we assess the applications of Matrigel in cell culture, regenerative medicine and organoid assembly, detailing the limitations of Matrigel and highlighting synthetic scaffold alternatives that have shown equivalent or superior results. Additionally, we discuss the hurdles that are limiting a full transition from Matrigel to synthetic scaffolds and provide a brief perspective on the future directions of synthetic scaffolds for cell culture applications. Matrigel is widely used for cell culture; however, its ill-defined composition, batch-to-batch variability, and animal-derived nature lead to experimental uncertainty and a lack of reproducibility. In this Review, we discuss the limitations of Matrigel and highlight synthetic alternatives for stem cell culture, regenerative medicine and organoid assembly.
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              Phototactic guidance of a tissue-engineered soft-robotic ray.

              Inspired by the relatively simple morphological blueprint provided by batoid fish such as stingrays and skates, we created a biohybrid system that enables an artificial animal--a tissue-engineered ray--to swim and phototactically follow a light cue. By patterning dissociated rat cardiomyocytes on an elastomeric body enclosing a microfabricated gold skeleton, we replicated fish morphology at 1/10 scale and captured basic fin deflection patterns of batoid fish. Optogenetics allows for phototactic guidance, steering, and turning maneuvers. Optical stimulation induced sequential muscle activation via serpentine-patterned muscle circuits, leading to coordinated undulatory swimming. The speed and direction of the ray was controlled by modulating light frequency and by independently eliciting right and left fins, allowing the biohybrid machine to maneuver through an obstacle course.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Advanced Intelligent Systems
                Advanced Intelligent Systems
                Wiley
                2640-4567
                2640-4567
                April 08 2024
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Mechanical Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02472 USA
                Article
                10.1002/aisy.202300834
                d10a8525-11e2-49e9-be72-b600f1d6da12
                © 2024

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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