PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Hydrogel cilia set new standard in microrobotics

Scientists create biologically realistic artificial cilia

2026-01-14
(Press-News.org) Embargo details:

“3D-printed low-voltage-driven ciliary hydrogel microactuators” has been scheduled for publication in Nature on 14 January 2026 at 16:00 (London time), 14 January 2026 at 11:00 (US Eastern Time). The embargo will lift at this time.

 

Stuttgart – Cilia are micrometer-sized biological structures that occur frequently in nature. Their characteristic high-frequency, three-dimensional beating motions (5 – 40 Hz) play indispensable roles inside the body. In the human brain, ciliary motion is crucial for neuronal maturation; in the lungs, it is essential for clearing the respiratory tract; and in the reproductive system, cilia transport gametes. Conversely, impaired or damaged cilia can lead to neurodevelopmental disorders, respiratory dysfunction, infertility, or malformations of the embryo.

Scientists from the Physical Intelligence Department at the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems (MPI-IS) in Stuttgart, from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and Koç University in Istanbul created artificial cilia from hydrogel, which they can move individually or in groups applying an electric field. Their groundbreaking work will be published in Nature on January 14, 2026 bearing the title “3D-printed low-voltage-driven ciliary hydrogel microactuators”.

Each microactuator or microrobot is only 18 micrometers in length with a diameter of around 2 micrometers, nearly as small as real cilia. The scientists placed hundreds of their cilia on a flexible foil-like substrate that contains built-in electrodes. Around each cilium, they placed four small electrodes. When the electrodes are switched on, they create an electric field that causes ions inside the hydrogel to move. This controlled ion migration is what sets the cilia into motion.

Depending on how the scientists power the electrodes, the hydrogel cilia can bend or spin. Turning on the electrodes on one side pushes the ions in that direction, causing the cilium to bend toward that side. To make the cilium rotate, the four electrodes are turned on in sequence, which makes the ions move in a circular path. The cilium then follows this motion and rotates smoothly in 3D.

“At small scales, using electrical signals to drive ion movement for actuation has proven to be a highly effective and efficient method. For example, the human body relies on electrical muscle signals to control the distribution of ions in muscle tissue, which then generates motion,” says Zemin Liu, who is the first author of the study. “Inspired by this principle, we developed micrometer-scale ion-driven hydrogels. Just like human muscle, these hydrogels move when electrical signals stimulate the ions inside them. In our work, we use only 1.5 volts, which is below the electrolysis threshold in aqueous environments and is completely safe, for instance inside the human body.”

To build the tiny arrays, the scientists use a method called Two-Photon Polymerization, also known as 2PP.  The team printed the hydrogel cilia nanometer small layer by layer to optimize the hydrogel network structure and actuation performance.

“The fluid inside our hydrogel moves fast because we created tiny, nanometer-scale pores throughout the material. These pores act like miniature highways that let the fluid flow more quickly and in greater volume, which produces stronger and more effective motions,” says Wenqi Hu, who led the Bioinspired Autonomous Miniature Robot Group at MPI-IS and who is now an Assistant Professor at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. “With our fabrication technique, even a very low voltage is enough to create a strong electric field, which pushes the ions to move rapidly. Thanks to both the pore structure and the strong electric field, our artificial cilia can react extremely fast.”

The team tested their microrobotic cilia more than 330,000 times. The tiny structures showed almost no signs of wear. This number of cycles corresponds to about a full day of continuous beating at 5 Hz — roughly the natural working lifespan of real biological cilia. The researchers also demonstrated that their artificial cilia could operate in different types of fluids, including biologically relevant liquids, such as human serum and mouse plasma.

“In the past, researchers could only observe how natural cilia behave. Now we finally have a robotic platform that lets us study cilia in action: how they move, how they work together as a collective group, and what kinds of fluids they can transport or mix,” says Metin Sitti, who led the Physical Intelligence Department at MPI-IS and who is now President of Koç University in Istanbul. “These hydrogel cilia could one day be used in biomedical settings to help restore or replace damaged cilia. As an important step forward in microactuation technology, they also open up fresh opportunities for designing miniature robotic systems, such as the flapping micromachine we demonstrated in this work.”

What could this cilia-technology enable in the real world? The research paves the way for several promising future applications:

(1) A new platform for studying how biological cilia work: Researchers can now use these artificial cilia arrays to carefully test how natural cilia move, how they collectively work together, and how they help with important tasks, such as development, sensing the environment, and moving fluids.

(2) Potential medical applications: The soft, controllable hydrogel cilia may inspire future therapeutic devices designed to help replace or support damaged cilia in the human body, especially with diseases where natural cilia no longer function properly in our respiratory and reproductive systems and brain ventricles.

(3) A foundation for next-generation microrobots and microdevices: The fast, low-voltage actuation showcased in this work could be used to design new types of tiny robots, microfluidic tools, and advanced engineering systems at the small scale.

 

 

Reference:

Zemin Liu, Che Wang, Ziyu Ren, Chunxiang Wang, Wenkang Wang, Jongkuk Ko, Shanyuan Song, Chong Hong, Xi Chen, Hongguang Wang, Wenqi Hu, and Metin Sitti

DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09944-6

“3D-printed low-voltage-driven ciliary hydrogel microactuators”

 

Please find the images, the graphic and the captions here. 

Link to a video illustarting the work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NalZmgF_u8o

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Application of orthogonal CNOP-I in a convection-allowing ensemble prediction system based on CMA-MESO for improving extreme precipitation skill

2026-01-14
Extreme summer precipitation events in China have grown increasingly frequent and intense, posing severe threats to human life, property, and socioeconomic development. Accurate forecasting of extreme precipitation is crucial for improving disaster prevention and mitigation. Ensemble forecasting quantifies prediction uncertainty by generating multiple simulations through strategic perturbations, thereby estimating the probability distribution of future atmospheric states. However, traditional initial perturbation methods using linear singular vectors (SVs) are insufficient to capture the nonlinear evolution of mesoscale convective ...

Study suggests bamboo has ‘superfood’ potential

2026-01-14
The world’s first academic review into bamboo consumption has identified a surprising range of health benefits, including helping control blood sugar, fighting inflammation, improving gut health and acting as an antioxidant. Bamboo is the fastest growing plant on earth, with some varieties growing up to 90cm per day. China and India are the world’s largest producers and although bamboo shoots are already a staple in many Asian diets, the new research indicates it could have an important role to play in diets worldwide. Bamboo is packed with protein, has moderate levels of fibre, is low in fat, contains amino acids, ...

Hidden heart-care gaps among Asian American patients

2026-01-14
Using nearly a decade of data (2015–2023) from 800+ U.S. hospitals and more than 700,000 patients overall, Northwestern researchers found that when Asian American heart failure patients are separated by ethnicity, rather than grouped together as “Asian,” important differences in care emerge across groups including Filipino, Vietnamese, Chinese, Asian Indian, Korean and Japanese patients.  For example, Filipino and Vietnamese patients were least likely to receive complete, guideline-recommended heart failure care. The study wasn’t designed to identify causes, but authors note the disparities may reflect differences ...

Blood test predicts which patients with lung cancer will benefit from newly approved immunotherapy drug

2026-01-14
A team led by investigators at the Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute has discovered that a particular marker on tumor cells circulating in the blood indicates whether a patient with lung cancer will experience a lasting response to a newly approved immunotherapy called tarlatamab. The findings, which are published in Cancer Discovery, could allow clinicians to easily and noninvasively determine which patients should receive the drug.   “Isolating cancer cells from the blood has tremendous potential to guide immune-related cancer therapies, and our group has created cutting edge ...

SwRI’s Dr. Michael Davis named SPIE Fellow

2026-01-14
SAN ANTONIO — January 14, 2026 — Southwest Research Institute’s (SwRI) Dr. Michael Davis has been named a Fellow of the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Davis is an astrophysicist who specializes in the design and testing of space instruments including those used for ultraviolet (UV) imaging and spectroscopy of remote planets, galactic astrophysics, and Earth’s plasmasphere. He was named a senior member of SPIE in 2021, and this latest honor puts him in the most elite category of membership. Founded in 1955, SPIE promotes the global optics and photonics community through conferences, publications and professional ...

Exposure to “forever chemicals” linked to higher risk of gestational diabetes, major review finds

2026-01-14
Exposure to “Forever Chemicals” Linked to Higher Risk of Gestational Diabetes, Major Review Finds Largest and most comprehensive systematic review and meta-analysis to date links PFAS exposure to insulin resistance and altered insulin secretion, identifying pregnancy as a key vulnerable period New York, NY (January 14, 2026) — Exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), a class of highly persistent environmental chemicals commonly referred to as “forever chemicals,” is associated with a higher risk of gestational diabetes mellitus and altered markers of insulin ...

Insilico Medicine integrates Nach01 Foundation Model with Microsoft Discovery to enable AI-native, enterprise-ready drug discovery workflows

2026-01-14
Cambridge, Massachusetts, January 14, 2025 - Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”, HKEX:03696), a clinical-stage biotechnology company driven by generative artificial intelligence (AI), today announced the demonstration of its Nach01 multimodal foundation model deployed on Microsoft Discovery, Microsoft’s science-focused platform designed to accelerate research and development through agentic AI. This collaboration highlights Microsoft Discovery’s extensibility with third-party AI models and illustrates how R&D organizations can adopt unified, AI-native ...

New study reveals precursors for forecasting summer clustered extreme precipitation events in Northeast China

2026-01-14
Against the background of accelerated global warming, the atmospheric moisture content has increased significantly and the hydrological cycle has intensified, leading to pronounced rises in both the frequency and intensity of extreme precipitation events globally. Northeast China, a region highly sensitive to climate change, has experienced increasing occurrence of clustered extreme heavy precipitation events in recent years. Improved knowledge of synoptic regimes and moisture accumulation responsible for clustered extreme heavy precipitation events (CEPEs) is essential for enhancing short-term forecasting skill and disaster prevention and mitigation. Researchers ...

A bacterial toxin can counteract colorectal cancer growth

2026-01-14
A toxin secreted by cholera bacteria can inhibit the growth of colorectal cancer without causing any measurable damage to the body. This is shown by a new study by researchers at Umeå University, Sweden. Systemic administration of the purified bacterial substance changes the immune microenvironment in tumours, and the results may open the way for research into a new type of cancer treatment. "The substance not only kills cancer cells directly. It reshapes the tumour environment and helps the immune system to work against the tumor without damaging healthy tissue," says Sun Nyunt Wai, professor at Umeå University and one of the lead authors behind ...

Frozen hydrogen cyanide ‘cobwebs’ offer clues to origin of life

2026-01-14
A substance poisonous to humans — hydrogen cyanide — may have helped create the seeds of life on Earth. At cold temperatures, hydrogen cyanide forms crystals. And, according to computer models reported in ACS Central Science, some of the facets on these crystals are highly reactive, enabling chemical reactions that are otherwise not possible at low temperatures. The researchers say these reactions could have started a cascade that gave rise to several building blocks of life. “We may never know precisely how life began, but understanding how some of its ingredients take shape is within reach. Hydrogen cyanide is likely one source of this chemical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How stepping into nature affects the brain

Study: Cancer’s clues in the bloodstream reveal the role androgen receptor alterations play in metastatic prostate cancer

FAU Harbor Branch awarded $900,000 for Gulf of America sea-level research

Terminal ileum intubation and biopsy in routine colonoscopy practice

Researchers find important clue to healthy heartbeats

Characteristic genomic and clinicopathologic landscape of DNA polymerase epsilon mutant colorectal adenocarcinomas

Start school later, sleep longer, learn better

Many nations underestimate greenhouse emissions from wastewater systems, but the lapse is fixable

The Lancet: New weight loss pill leads to greater blood sugar control and weight loss for people with diabetes than current oral GLP-1, phase 3 trial finds

Pediatric investigation study highlights two-way association between teen fitness and confidence

Researchers develop cognitive tool kit enabling early Alzheimer's detection in Mandarin Chinese

New book captures hidden toll of immigration enforcement on families

New record: Laser cuts bone deeper than before

Heart attack deaths rose between 2011 and 2022 among adults younger than age 55

Will melting glaciers slow climate change? A prevailing theory is on shaky ground

New treatment may dramatically improve survival for those with deadly brain cancer

Here we grow: chondrocytes’ behavior reveals novel targets for bone growth disorders

Leaping puddles create new rules for water physics

Scientists identify key protein that stops malaria parasite growth

Wildfire smoke linked to rise in violent assaults, new 11-year study finds

New technology could use sunlight to break down ‘forever chemicals’

Green hydrogen without forever chemicals and iridium

Billion-DKK grant for research in green transformation of the built environment

For solar power to truly provide affordable energy access, we need to deploy it better

Middle-aged men are most vulnerable to faster aging due to ‘forever chemicals’

Starving cancer: Nutrient deprivation effects on synovial sarcoma

Speaking from the heart: Study identifies key concerns of parenting with an early-onset cardiovascular condition

From the Late Bronze Age to today - Old Irish Goat carries 3,000 years of Irish history

Emerging class of antibiotics to tackle global tuberculosis crisis

Researchers create distortion-resistant energy materials to improve lithium-ion batteries

[Press-News.org] Hydrogel cilia set new standard in microrobotics
Scientists create biologically realistic artificial cilia