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Light-powered phagocytic macrophage microrobot (phagobot): both in vitro and in vivo

Light Science & Applications 2025 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Xing Li, Shuhan Zhong, Ting Pan, Ting Pan, Jianyun Xiong, Guoshuai Zhu, Yang Shi, Hongbao Xin

Summary

Scientists developed a light-controlled microrobot made from a living immune cell (macrophage) that can navigate toward and engulf foreign particles, including nanoplastics and bacteria. The system works by activating the macrophage with a focused infrared light beam, steering it toward targets without any genetic modification. This approach was demonstrated both in cell cultures and in living zebrafish, suggesting a potential new tool for targeted biological cleanup at the microscopic level.

Body Systems
Study Type In vivo

Micro/nanorobots based on immune cells show great potential for addressing challenging biological and biomedical conditions. However, their powerful innate immune functions, particularly the phagocytosis capabilities, remain a big challenge to fully leverage with the current designs of immune cell-based microrobots. Herein, we report a light-powered phagocytic macrophage microrobot (phagobot), which is capable of robotic navigation toward specific foreign bio-threats and executing precise phagocytosis of these targeted entities under light control. Without genetic modification or nanoengineering of macrophages, the phagobot's "wake-up" program is achieved through direct activation of a resting-state macrophage by a tightly focused near-infrared (NIR) light beam. The phagobot exhibits robotic steering and directional navigation controlled by optical manipulation of the extended pseudopodia within the activated macrophage. It can further execute targeted phagocytic clearance tasks via engulfing various foreign bio-threats, including nanoplastics, microbials, and cancer cell debris. Notably, the phagobot can be constructed in a living larval zebrafish through optical activation and manipulation of the endogenous macrophage, which also exhibits controllable navigation and targeted phagocytic capabilities in vivo. With the intrinsic immune functions of macrophages, our light-powered phagobot represents a novel form of intelligent immune cell-based microrobots, holding many new possibilities for precise immune regulation and treatment for immune-related diseases.

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