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Scientists 'engineer' a jellyfish

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The artificial jellyfish. (Image credit: <a class="tpstyle" href="http://www.seas.harvard.edu/news-events/press-releases/artificial-jellyfish-swims-in-a-heartbeat" target="_blank">Harvard/Caltech</a>)
The artificial jellyfish. (Image credit: Harvard/Caltech)
Published: July 23, 2012 at 5:08 PM

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July 23 (UPI) -- U.S. researchers say they've used inanimate silicone and living cardiac muscle cells to reverse engineer a freely swimming artificial "jellyfish."

Researchers at Harvard University and the California Institute of Technology say the successful effort was a proof of concept for reverse engineering a variety of muscular organs and simple life forms.

A description of the research that led to the tissue-engineered jellyfish, dubbed "Medusoid," has been published in Nature Biotechnology.

Jellyfish propel themselves through the water by pumping, in an action similar to the way a human heart pumps blood through the body, researchers said.

"It occurred to me in 2007 that we might have failed to understand the fundamental laws of muscular pumps," Kit Parker, a Harvard professor of bioengineering, said.

"I started looking at marine organisms that pump to survive. Then I saw a jellyfish at the New England Aquarium and I immediately noted both similarities and differences between how the jellyfish and the human heart pump."

Researchers used a sheet of cultured rat heart muscle tissue that would contract when electrically stimulated in a liquid environment to create an ersatz jellyfish.

The artificial construct was placed in container of ocean-like salt water and shocked into swimming with synchronized muscle contractions that mimic those of real jellyfish.

"I was surprised that with relatively few components -- a silicone base and cells that we arranged -- we were able to reproduce some pretty complex swimming and feeding behaviors that you see in biological jellyfish," said John Dabiri, a Caltech professor of aeronautics and bioengineering.

The researchers said they hope to further evolve the artificial jellyfish, allowing it to turn and move in a particular direction, and even incorporating a simple "brain" so it can respond to its environment.

© 2012 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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