Artificial jellyfish pumps like a heart - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:17 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Artificial jellyfish pumps like a heart

Bioengineers have used the heart cells of a rat and silicone to build an artificial jellyfish whose movements mimic the rhythmic pumping of the heart muscle and could help drug makers improve cardiac function.

Harvard, Caltech scientists build 'medusoid' out of rat heart cells, silicone

Scientists at Harvard University and Caltech have engineered an artificial jellyfish, shown here 'swimming' in a container of ocean-like salt water, using rat heart cells and silicone. The color and contrast in the image have been digitally enhanced. (Harvard University/Caltech )

Bioengineers and physicists at Harvard University and the California Institute of Technology have used the heart cells of a rat and a silicone scaffoldingto build an artificial jellyfishwhose movements mimic the rhythmic pumping of the heart muscle and could help drug makers improve cardiac function.

Until now, researchers have been able to measure how some heart drugs help muscles contract, but they've not been able to fully understand how they might work on the pumping action, said Kevin Kit Parker, a professor of bioengineering and applied physics at Harvard's School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, whogot the idea tocreate a synthetic jellyfish after visiting the New England Aquarium in Boston.

The visit got Parkerthinking about how jellyfishusetheir muscles topump their waythrough the water and how this movementmight relate to the pumping of blood in the human heart.

'I remember looking at the jellyfish, thinking, "I can build that".' Kevin Kit Parker, Harvard University bioengineer

Hewas interested in understanding the mechanics of theheart's muscular pumpat the cellular level and howthat relates to disease.Parker had a hunch that if he identified some similarities thathuman muscular pumps share with muscular pumps inother species, he might have a better understanding of what can impede their function.

"I remember looking at the jellyfish, thinking, 'I can build that,'" said Parker in an interview with CBCNews.ca. "And that kind of dovetailed with what I was trying to do, and that's understanding what the fundamental rules are for muscular pumps across nature."

As he sees it, "if you understand what the fundamental rules are, when the rules get broken, that's your disease, and sometimes, just really understanding what the disease is is the first step in curing it."

Jellyfish propelled by pacemaker

A split image comparing the body design of a real jellyfish, left, and a medusoid. (Caltech /Harvard University)

As head ofHarvard's interdisciplinarydisease biophysics group, Parker already had experience building tissues from cells for the purpose of testing new drugs and was confident that with some help from John Dabiriof Caltech, an expert in fluid dynamics and biological propulsion, he could build something that would mimic the jellyfish's movement.

It took the two of them, along with Dabiri's PhD student Janna Nawroth, four years tocreate their "medusoid," which looks like a jellyfish, swims like a jellyfish but whose motion is controlled by the cells of a rat heart mounted on a body made of a silicone polymer, the same material that is usedto makebreast implants.

The species of jellyfish the scientists modelled their medusoid after is the moon jellyfish, shown swimming in a fish tank at the Sunshine International Aquarium in Tokyo. (Issei Kato/Japan)

The researchers'creation, dubbed 'medusoid' after Medusa, the name sometimes given to jellyfish because their tentacles resemble the snakes on the head of the Greek mythical creature, isdescribed in a paper publishedin the July 22 issue ofNature Biotechnology.

When Parker, Dabiri and their colleagues set about studying what drivesa jellyfish's heart-like pumping motion, theyfound it has a pacemaker, like human and animal hearts do, that sends electrical signals to muscles causing them to contract rhythmically in a pumping motion.

Thatsimilarity enabledthe researchers to usecells from the heart of a rat to construct their synthetic jellyfish, which they modelled after the Aurelia aurita species of jellyfish, known as the moon jellyfish.

Motor protein structure similar

Even though rat heart cells and jellyfish cells are shaped differently, the proteinsthat drive their motor function are arranged in remarkably similar networks, Parker said.

The muscle structure of the synthetic jellyfish was built using rat heart cells and a chemical scaffolding that was stamped onto a silicone base. (Caltech/Harvard University )

That made it easier to coax the rat cellsto behave like jellyfish cells.

"When we built the jellyfish, all we had to do was get the rat heart cells to rebuild their protein motor networks in the same orientation and the same architecture and same alignment as the jellyfish," Parker said.

To do that, the researchers built a type of biochemicalscaffolding that they stamped onto a thin, flexiblesilicone film and let the cells assemble themselves on it.

But unlike the wood, steel and other inanimate materials that civil engineers work with, the cells Parker and Dabiri were manipulating had awill of their own, and the bioengineers had to first learn how to control them in order to get them to arrange themselves in the right pattern.

"We can control the surface chemistry on the polymer thin film, and when the cells came down there, it's just like when you're driving and you're reading street signs," Parker said.

"Basically, the cells saw all these directions. We knew how they were going to behave when they saw them, so we put all these geometric cues in the surface chemistryin order to guide their behaviour."

'Morphologically, this thing is a jellyfish; functionally, this thing is a jellyfish; but genetically, it's still a rat.' Kevin Kit Parker, Harvard University bioengineer

It took a few tries to get just theright blend of a rat's heart chemistry and a jellyfish's musclegeometry.

"The environment had to be a little bit like a rat so the rat cells felt comfortable, but it had to be a little bit like a jellyfish, so they would function like a jellyfish," Parker said. "We had to go through several different builds in order to strikea balance between the microenvironment of the rat heart and the microenvironment of the jellyfish musculature."

One unique aspect of the study is the method the scientists used to check their work. To see how well the protein networks in their artificial jellyfishaligned with the ones in the real organism,Parker and his colleaguesused the same mathematical algorithm police use whenanalyzing fingerprints.

Parker said that while this type of quality control and performance testing is nothing new in the manufacturing industry, it hasn't really been applied as rigorouslyin the area of tissue engineering.

Replicated complex feeding motion

Part of that performance testing was ensuring that the medusoid not only moved like a real jellyfish but did so at the same speed and was also able create the same kind of complex currents and vortices in water that jellyfish do when they feed.

A jellyfish'smouth is up insideits bell-shaped body so the only way, itcan feeditself is to spin a vortex off the tip of what areknown as the lappets, thecrinkly sensory structures that rimthe edge of the bell,and that throws the food up toward the mouth, Parker says.

The researchers had to ensure their synthetic medusoid replicated not just the way a jellyfish moves but also the speed at which it moves and the complex way it creates vortices in the water when it feeds. Here, the respective velocities of the real and synthetic jellyfish are shown. (Caltech/Harvard University )

Similar vortices occur in the human heart during systole, or contraction,and can indicate whether the heart is functioning properly. So, it was a big deal when the scientists were able toverify that their synthetic jellyfish was creating the same feeding currents as a realjellyfish.

"Then we knew it wasn't just about this thing flopping around in the water," he said.

Once the medusoid was built,Parker and his colleaguesplaced it in nutrient-rich, ocean-like saltwater and used electrical currents to test its motion in a controlled manner, but the synthetic jellyfish was also able to swim on its own.

"A lot of times as soon as we released these things from the scaffold that held it in place while the cells were aligning, they would just start to swim away, and that's because they had their own autonomous feeding," Parker said.

Medusoid will helptest potential new drugs

Now that they have standardized a way to build medusoids, the researchers can usethem to do some early-stage testing of the efficacy ofpotential new heart drugs that are meant to improve the pumping function of the heart.

Artistic rendering of the process of reverse-engineering a jellyfish. (Janna Nawroth/Caltech)

The next goal will be toreplace the rat cells with human heart cells.

But that still leaves the question whetherthe current incarnation of the medusoid is more like ajellyfish, thought to be one of the earliest multi-organ animals,dating back several hundred million years, or a rat, a more recent arrival on Earth.

"Morphologically, this thing is a jellyfish; functionally, this thing is a jellyfish; but genetically, it's still a rat," said Parker.

Thedilemma over how to classify the medusoidraises some tricky philosophical questions about how we identify a species, he adds.

"Nowadays, with genetic sequencing, we identify people and species by their genome, but the custom in naming marine life forms has been to identify them based on their body shape, so it's kind of like, which lens do you view this through?"

"Should we change the fundamental way by which we identify different species now that we have the technology to sequence their genome?"