Harnessing the Force Generated by Nanoscale Enzymes to Power Active Motion of µ - sphere
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Abstract
Living systems harness energy from their surroundings to achieve complex movements, such
as simultaneous rotation and translation. This capability is particularly evident in
microorganisms like Chlamydomonas and Volvox, which navigate challenging environments
with remarkable precision. These biological active systems achieve self-propulsion via various
swimming mechanisms, such as the use of rotating flagella, cilia, or the peculiar amoeboid
motion used by eukaryotic cells to crawl or swim. In the biological world at every level, we
will find a huge number of active systems such as molecular motors (ATP-consuming
machines) at the nano scale, sperm cells, shape transformation in cells at the cellular level, and
green algae motion (Volvox) at the multi-cellular level, school of fishes at macro scale etc.
Inspired by nature, to date, many nano/micron-sized non-living active particles have been
synthesized. These active particles can move on their own or by use of an external energy
source like a magnetic field, sound waves (acoustic-driven particles), chemical reactions like
H2O2 decomposition (gas propulsion), exothermic reaction (rise temperature gradient),
electrochemical reactions (generate ion gradient), light source (photothermal effects), and
induce isomerization (photochromic). Even with significant advancements in the field of
nano/micro scale active systems, their use in biomedical applications like drug delivery or
blood clot repair remains unattainable. The primary constraints are their size, poor
biocompatibility of the fuels for active motion, as well as materials used for fabrication and
their mobility in biological fluids.
Enzymes are excellent candidates for use as catalysts because of their high turnover numbers,
excellent selectivity in physiological conditions, and biocompatibility. Recent studies revealed
that enzymes while catalysing, can produce enough mechanical force to move themselves or
the chassis material, they are attached to. In this study, we introduce a design principle for
achieving simultaneous spinning and linear motion in biocompatible chassis material. For the
chassis, we employed lipid vesicles. Flexible enzymes undergoing cyclic, conformational
change with substrate supply, drive the mechanical work. Leveraging transient interactions, we
induce spontaneous symmetry-breaking in enzyme distribution on GUVs, enabling diverse
movements from pure spinning to spiral 3D trajectories. Overall, we proposed that clusters of
flexible enzymes distributed anisotropically on any rigid chassis material can generate
tangential shear stress and execute emergent kinematics from pure rotational to gyrational