posted on 2025-02-04, 06:30authored byLamar O. Mair, Emily E. Evans, Lester Barnsley, Aleksandar Nacev, Pavel Y. Stepanov, Sahar Jafari, Benjamin Shapiro, Cindi L. Dennis, Irving N. Weinberg
Magnetic drug targeting requires particles to move through
the
complex viscoelastic environments of tissues and biological fluids.
However, these environments often inhibit particle motion, making
it difficult for magnetically guided particles to reach their intended
targets. Magnetic microrods are easy to grow and manipulate, but experience
significant hindrance to transport in complex, tortuous, tissue-like
environments. Simple magnetic force translation (“pulling”
or “pushing”) is often insufficient or inefficient for
long-range transport of microrods through such environments. Designing
microrods capable of rotating while being pulled with a magnetic force
may enable rods to overcome hindrances to transport. We present microrods
with orthogonally magnetized segments, actuated by simultaneous magnetic
force and magnetic torque. By simultaneously pulling and rotating
our rods we create smooth-surfaced magnetic drilling microrods (MDMRs)
capable of enhanced motion through protein-dense biopolymers. We model
magnetic force and torque on MDMRs, characterize MDMR dynamics during
transport, and demonstrate enhanced MDMR transport through protein-dense
matrices in vitro.