Now, robotic sperm to help fertilise eggs
Researchers have developed sperm-based biobots that can be used to fertilise individual eggs or to deliver targeted doses of drugs to them.
Oliver Schmidt and his team at the Institute for Integrative Nanosciences in Dresden, Germany, made this breakthrough by combining individual sperm cells with tiny magnetic metal tubes, New Scientist reported.
For creating them, Schmidt's group fashioned microtubes 50 microns long, by 5 to 8 microns in diameter from iron and titanium nanoparticles.
Then the researchers added the microtubes to a fluid that contained thawed bull sperm, and as tube's one end was narrower than the other, sperm reaching the wider end become trapped, headfirst, while their flagella was still free.
Scientists were able to control microtubes' orientation by using external magnetic fields.
The paper has been published in journal Advanced Materials.