Nano/microscale vehicles for capture and isolation of target biomolecules and living organisms
US-9879310-B2 · Jan 30, 2018 · US
US10927396B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10927396-B2 |
| Application number | US-201816175024-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Oct 30, 2018 |
| Priority date | Oct 30, 2018 |
| Publication date | Feb 23, 2021 |
| Grant date | Feb 23, 2021 |
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Disclosed are materials, devices, methods and systems for the detection of target molecules in test samples using microrobots. The target molecules may be bacterial toxins. The microrobots may include biohybrid materials such as porous spore core, a middle layer coated on the spore core for the actuation and steering in a fluid and further conjugation with a functional probe, and a sensing probe anchored onto middle layer for attaching to the targeted molecules in a fluid to respond to fluorescent tracking. A system for detecting bacterial toxin, is disclosed and comprises an intelligent motion control system based on automated fluorescent recognition and detection methods, which can propel and guide the microrobots to realize the automated motion in a pre-designed path and perform the real-time monitoring when integrating with an inverted fluorescent microscope or a fluorescent emission multi-reader.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A steerable micro-robot comprising: a core with a widest dimension less than 20 microns, wherein the core is a naturally occurring biological material; a magnetic coating on a surface of the core; and a detection probe coating on the surface of the magnetic coating, wherein the detection probe coating comprises carbon dots functionalized with targeting ligands configured to specifically bind to target molecules. 2. The steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , wherein the naturally occurring biological material comprises an inactivated bacterial spore, an inactivated fungal spore, or an inactivated plant spore. 3. The steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , wherein the magnetic coating comprises magnetic nanoparticles. 4. The steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , wherein the magnetic coating defines a thickness of about 50 nm to 200 nm. 5. The steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , further comprising a self-assembled monolayer, wherein the self-assembled monolayer functionalizes the magnetic coating. 6. The steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , wherein the targeting ligands comprise oligosaccharides, aptamers, or phenylboronic acid. 7. The steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , wherein the targeting ligands are configured to bind to the target molecules, wherein the target molecules comprise at least one of: toxins associated with at least one of toxin A or toxin B of Clostridium difficile bacteria; endotoxins of Gram-negative bacteria; mycotonxin; ochratoxin A; fumonisine B1; and plant ricin B toxin. 8. The steerable micro-robot of claim 7 , wherein the detection probe coating is configured to emit or quench florescence upon binding with the target molecules. 9. A system for detecting bacteria in a test sample with a plurality of steerable micro-robots according to claim 1 , the system comprising: the plurality of steerable micro-robots; a sample holder configured to receive the test sample and the plurality of steerable micro-robots; a magnetic field generator configured to steer the plurality of steerable micro-robots in the test sample with a magnetic field; and an imaging device configured to sense fluorescence of the plurality of steerable micro-robots while being steered in the test sample. 10. The system of claim 9 , further comprising a a controller, wherein the controller is configured to provide dynamic currents to the magnetic field generator in order to steer the plurality of steerable micro-robots in the test sample. 11. The system of claim 10 , further comprising: a sample stage with at least two degrees of freedom, wherein the sample stage is coupled to the sample holder; wherein the controller is configured to simultaneously cause the sample stage to move relative to the imaging device and cause the plurality of steerable micro-robots to be steered in the test sample in order to determine with the imaging device a subset of the plurality of steerable micro-robots having a brightest fluorescence. 12. A method of producing a steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , comprising: coating the biological material core with a magnetic coating on a surface of the core; and coating the magnetic coating coated the core with the detection probe coating comprises carbon dots functionalized with targeting ligands. 13. The method of claim 12 , further comprising removing impurities on an exine and internal core substances of the core prior to coating the core with the magnetic coating, wherein the core is a bacterial, fungal or plant spore that has been inactivated. 14. A method of detecting bacteria in a test sample with the steerable micro-robot of claim 1 , comprising: sensing the fluorescence emitted by the carbon dots of the steerable micro-robot in a test sample with an image sensor. 15. The method of claim 14 , further comprising continuously moving the steerable micro-robot with a rotating magnetic field generating by a magnetic field generator. 16. The method of claim 15 , wherein continuously moving the steerable micro-robot comprises controlling spin, rotation-translate, and/or tumble. 17. The method of claim 15 , wherein continuously moving the steerable micro-robot comprises moving the magnetically steerable micro-robot around a pre-determined path. 18. The method of claim 14 , wherein sensing the fluorescence comprises detecting, with the image sensor, fluorescent quenching caused by the detection probe coating binding to a toxin indicating the presence of a bacteria associated with the toxin. 19. A method of detecting bacteria in a test sample with a plurality of steerable micro-robots according to claim 1 , the method comprising: determining a subset of the plurality of steerable micro-robots by sensing which of the plurality of steerable micro-robots in the test sample has a brightest fluorescence with an image sensor; continuously moving the subset of the plurality of steerable micro-robots in the test sample with a rotating magnetic field generated by a magnetic field generator; and sensing fluorescence of the continuously moving subset of steerable micro-robots in the test sample with the image sensor. 20. The method of claim 19 , wherein determining the subset of the plurality of steerable micro-robots comprises moving the test sample relative to the image sensor with a sample stage with at least two degrees of freedom while the image sensor senses fluorescence of the plurality of steerable micro-robots.
Bacteria · CPC title
involving proteins, peptides or amino acids {(involving lipoproteins G01N33/92)} · CPC title
the carrier being a biological cell or cell fragment, e.g. bacteria, yeast cells · CPC title
Micromanipulators · CPC title
invasive, e.g. introduced into the body by a catheter or needle or using implanted sensors (A61B5/1459, A61B5/1464, A61B5/1473, A61B5/1482, A61B5/14865 take precedence) · CPC title
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