Smartphone-controlled optogenetically engineered cells enable semiautomatic glucose homeostasis in diabetic mice

Jiawei Shao(East China Normal University), Shuai Xue(East China Normal University), Guiling Yu(East China Normal University), Yuanhuan Yu(East China Normal University), Xueping Yang(East China Normal University), Yu Bai(Shanghai Academy of Spaceflight Technology), Sucheng Zhu(East China Normal University), Linfeng Yang(East China Normal University), Jianli Yin(East China Normal University), Yidan Wang(East China Normal University), Shuyong Liao(East China Normal University), Sanwei Guo(Shanghai International Medical Center), Mingqi Xie(ETH Zurich), Martin Fussenegger(ETH Zurich), Haifeng Ye(East China Normal University)
Science Translational Medicine
April 26, 2017
Cited by 198

Abstract

With the increasingly dominant role of smartphones in our lives, mobile health care systems integrating advanced point-of-care technologies to manage chronic diseases are gaining attention. Using a multidisciplinary design principle coupling electrical engineering, software development, and synthetic biology, we have engineered a technological infrastructure enabling the smartphone-assisted semiautomatic treatment of diabetes in mice. A custom-designed home server SmartController was programmed to process wireless signals, enabling a smartphone to regulate hormone production by optically engineered cells implanted in diabetic mice via a far-red light (FRL)-responsive optogenetic interface. To develop this wireless controller network, we designed and implanted hydrogel capsules carrying both engineered cells and wirelessly powered FRL LEDs (light-emitting diodes). In vivo production of a short variant of human glucagon-like peptide 1 (shGLP-1) or mouse insulin by the engineered cells in the hydrogel could be remotely controlled by smartphone programs or a custom-engineered Bluetooth-active glucometer in a semiautomatic, glucose-dependent manner. By combining electronic device-generated digital signals with optogenetically engineered cells, this study provides a step toward translating cell-based therapies into the clinic.


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