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Interactions between Liquid Metal Droplets and Bacterial, Fungal, and Mammalian Cells

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 19:58 authored by Samuel Cheeseman, Aaron ElbourneAaron Elbourne, Sheeana Gangadoo, Zoe Shaw, Saffron BryantSaffron Bryant, Nitu SyedNitu Syed, Andrew ChristoffersonAndrew Christofferson, Russell CrawfordRussell Crawford, Torben DaenekeTorben Daeneke, James Chapman, Vi Khanh Truong
Liquid metals (LMs) have emerged as novel materials for biomedical applications. Here, the interactions taking place between cells and LMs are reported, presenting a unique opportunity to explore and understand the LM-biological interface. Several high-resolution imaging techniques are used to characterize the interaction between droplets of gallium LM and bacterial, fungal, and mammalian cells. Adhesive interactions between cells and LM droplets are observed, causing deformation of the LM droplet surface, resulting in surface wrinkling and in some cases, breakage of the native oxide layer present on the LM droplet surface. In many instances, the cell wall deforms to intimately contact the LM droplets. Single-cell force spectroscopy is performed to quantify the adhesion forces between cells and LM and characterize the nature of the adhesion. It is proposed that the flexible nature of the cell enables multiple adhesion sites with the LM droplets, imparting tensile forces on the LM droplet surface, which results in surface wrinkling on the LM droplets due to their liquid nature. Molecular dynamics simulations also suggest that flexible biomolecules on the cell surface can disrupt the Ga2O3 layer formed at the LM droplet surface. This study reveals a unique biointerfacial interaction and provides insights into the mechanisms involved.

Funding

Liquid metal chemistry towards grain boundary-free electronic materials

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Advanced Materials Interfaces

Volume

9

Number

2102113

Issue

7

Start page

1

End page

14

Total pages

14

Publisher

Wiley

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH

Former Identifier

2006114226

Esploro creation date

2022-07-14

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