Behold the first microchip valve entirely powered by living cells.
Cyborg Earthworm
Japanese researchers developed a tiny microchip valve that can be entirely powered by a living earthworm's muscles, no electricity required. According to a press release, it's the first valve of its kind entirely powered by living cells.
The valve is a so-called Bio-MEMS (biomedical microelectromechanical system) — a kind of technology that's been used in electrochemical sensors.
What makes this particular system stand out is that it uses only real muscle rather than relying on an external power source to open and shut the valve. A naturally abundant chemical called acetylcholine triggers the movement.
"Bio-Friendly"
"Not only can our bio-MEMS work without an external power source, but unlike other chemically driven valves that are controlled by acids, our muscle-driven valve runs on molecules that are naturally abundant in living organisms," says first author Yo Tanaka, a researcher at the RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research. "This makes it bio-friendly and especially suited for medical applications in which the use of electricity is difficult or not advised."
The team is hopeful that they could create a whole host of "cultured muscle cells" that could one day be used in medical implants, but they'll have to account for a far weaker force when compared to real muscle.
READ MORE: Cyborg-like microchip valve driven by earthworm muscle [RIKEN]
More on cyborg tech: The Cyborgs Are Here: Researchers Put Living Cells In A Robotic Finger
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