Half-moth, half machine, a new generation of remote-controlled insects could one day be used as spies
GOVERNMENT
spooks want cyborg insects to snoop on their enemies. Biologists want
to tap into the nervous systems of insects to understand how they fly.
A probe that can be implanted into moths to control their flight could
help satisfy both parties. One day, it could even help rehabilitate
people who have had strokes.
The
US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has been running a
programme to develop machine-insect interfaces for years but electrodes
implanted to stimulate the brains or wing muscles of insects were not
precise enough. Now Joel Voldman
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and colleagues have
designed a unique, flexible neural probe that can be attached directly
to an insect's ventral nerve cord (VNC), which, along with the brain,
makes up the central nervous system in insects.
Another
reason previous attempts have not been entirely successful was because
the impedance of the electrodes did not match that of the insect's
tissue. This probe is made of a polyimide polymer coated with gold and
carbon nanotubes, and its impedance is much closer to that of nerve
tissue. One end of the probe is a ring that clamps around the VNC. The
inside of the ring has five electrodes which stimulate distinct nerve
bundles within the VNC.
Attached
to the probe is a wireless stimulator, which contains a radio receiver,
as well as a battery and a device to generate electrical pulses. The
team implanted the device in the abdomen of a tobacco hawkmoth (Manduca sexta).
As it weighs less than half a gram, it is easy for the moth to carry.
"Their wingspan is the width of your hand," says Voldman. "These are
big guys."
Testing on tethered moths revealed that stimulating one side of the VNC made the moth's abdomen turn one way, and vice versa (Journal of Neuroscience Methods, DOI: 10.1016/j.jneumeth. 2011.11.026).
The amount the abdomen turned depended on the strength of the current,
which ranged from about 1 to 10 microamperes. The team then implanted
the device in untethered moths and sent commands remotely. The moths
turned left or right whenever the appropriate signal was delivered (see video at newscientist.com/article/dn21431)
"This
is a major advance," says insect neurobiologist Roy Ritzmann at Case
Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. DARPA hopes this kind of
control will one day allow intelligence agencies to use insects to
carry surveillance equipment and spy on unsuspecting enemies.
The
researchers also found that the relatively low current required to
control the moth meant they were able to pick up nerve signals. This
should allow them to gain an insight into the impulses that make a moth
fly, something that has not been possible with previous electrode
designs. The low current was also less damaging to the moth.
Voldman's
team is now talking to neurobiologists to see if the probe could be
used in humans. "It turns out there are a bunch of cylindrical nerves
in humans that are about the same size," says Voldman. Electrodes that
stimulate nerve bundles could help rehabilitate people who have lost
mobility after a stroke.
So
will insect cyborgs soon become a reality? "It is a step toward that
goal, but we are still a long way away," says Ritzmann. "To really get
to a cyborg, we would need to tap where behavioural commands come from
and often that is the brain. We are just starting to understand these
brain circuits."
Cy-bugs make their own power
A true cyborg insect needs more than neural circuits. It also needs a power source, and batteries won't cut it over long periods.Daniel Scherson at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and colleagues built a fuel cell that taps into an insect's chemical energy. The fuel cell's anode was coated with two enzymes: the first converts a sugar called trehalose in an insect's blood into glucose; the second oxidised the glucose and extracted electrons.
When implanted into the abdomen of a female cockroach, the fuel cell delivered about 55 microwatts per square centimetre of electrode (Journal of the American Chemical Society, DOI: 10.1021/ja210794c).
http://www.newscientist.com/
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