Injectable chemically powered nanomotors may revolutionize biomedical technologies, but to date, it is a challenge for them to move autonomously in the blood circulation system and they are too large in size to break through the biological barriers therein. Herein, we report a general scalable colloidal chemistry synthesis approach for the fabrication of ultrasmall urease-powered Janus nanomotors (UPJNMs) that have a size (100–30 nm) meeting the requirement to break through the biological barriers in the blood circulation system and can efficiently move in body fluids with only endogenous urea as fuel. In our protocol, the two hemispheroid surfaces of eccentric Au−polystyrene nanoparticles are stepwise grafted with poly(ethylene glycol) brushes and ureases via selective etching and chemical coupling, respectively, forming the UPJNMs. The UPJNMs have lasting powerful mobility with ionic tolerance and positive chemotaxis, while they are able to be dispersed steadily and self-propelled in real body fluids, as well as demonstrate good biosafety and a long circulation time in the blood circulation system of mice. Thus, the as-prepared UPJNMs are promising as an active theranostics nanosystem for future biomedical applications.
Artificial nanomotors are nanoscale machines capable of converting surrounding other energy into mechanical motion and thus entering the tissues and cells of organisms. They hold great potential to revolutionize the diagnosis and treatment of diseases by actively targeting the lesion location, though there are many new challenges that arise with decreasing the size to nanoscale. This review summarizes and comments on the state-of-the-art artificial nanomotors with advantages and limitations. It starts with the fabrication methods, including common physical vapor deposition and colloidal chemistry methods, followed by the locomotion characterization and motion manipulation. Then, the in vitro and in vivo biomedical applications are introduced in detail. The challenges and future prospects are discussed at the end.
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