Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lab-engineered jellyfish may mend a broken heart

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(AFP) Using cells from rat hearts and a seer polymer film, scientists reported they had created an artificial jellyfish that could one day help save patients with heart disease.

The exploit marks an advance in so-called biomimicry, in which a natural wonder inspires copycat innovation in the lab.

The interest in the jellyfish lies in its remarkable swimming ability, which comes from muscles that open its bell-like body and then contract it, thus ejecting water and driving the creature along. This pump-like design has been honed by more than 500 million years of evolu- tion to be as simple and energyeffi­cient as possible. As a result, it offers tempting insights for scientists hoping to make small, reliable heart pumps for the future.

"It occurred to me in 2007 that we might have failed to understand the fundamenta­l laws of muscular pumps," said Kevin Kit Parker, a professor of bio-engineerin­g at the Harvard School of Engineerin­g and Applied Sciences. "I started looking at marine organisms that pump to survive. Then I saw a jellyfish at the New England Aquarium, and I immediatel­y noted both similariti­es and difference­s between how the jellyfish and the human heart pump."

The paper is published on Sunday in the journal Nature Biotechnol­ogy.

Dubbed "Medusoid" after the Medusa, the snake-haired creature of mythology that provides the Latin name for jellyfish, the lab creature has a body of an ultra-thin silicone polymer with eight limb-like appendages.

The arms are coated with a protein in patterns that resemble the muscle architectu­re of the real jellyfish.

The protein's job is to act as a nutritiona­l scaffold to grow and direct a batch of cells derived from the muscles of rat hearts.

Thus primed for action, Medusoid was unleashed in a lab container of electrical­ly conductive fluid. The scientists threw a switch to put a tiny voltage, ranging from one to five volts, into the fluid to make Medusoid's muscle cells contract and relax rhythmical­ly.

"I was surprised that with relatively few components -- a silicone base and cells that we arranged -- we were able to reproduce some pretty complex swimming and feeding behaviours that you see in biological jellyfish," said John Dabiri, a professor of aeronautic­s and bioenginee­ring at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

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