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    Home»Science»Scientists Have Used Nanotechnology To “Tattoo” Tardigrades
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    Scientists Have Used Nanotechnology To “Tattoo” Tardigrades

    By American Chemical SocietyMay 1, 202510 Comments4 Mins Read
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    Tardigrade Tattoo
    This tardigrade is sporting a new “tattoo” — represented in this magnified image by the highlighted dots, and visible in the inset image. Credit: Adapted from Nano Letters 2025, DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5c00378

    Scientists tattooed tardigrades using ice lithography, demonstrating a method that could lead to biocompatible microelectronics and futuristic biomedical technologies.

    If you haven’t heard of a tardigrade before, prepare to be amazed. These clumsy, eight-legged creatures, nicknamed water bears, are about half a millimeter long and can survive practically anything: freezing temperatures, near starvation, high pressure, radiation exposure, outer space, and more.

    In a new study published in the journal Nano Letters, researchers leveraged the tardigrade’s near-indestructibility to test a new microfabrication technique. They successfully applied tiny, biocompatible “tattoos” onto the animals, demonstrating the method’s potential for building microscopic devices that interact with living organisms.

    “Through this technology, we’re not just creating micro-tattoos on tardigrades — we’re extending this capability to various living organisms, including bacteria,” explains Ding Zhao, a co-author of the paper.

    Microfabrication has revolutionized electronics and photonics, creating micro- and nanoscale devices ranging from microprocessors and solar cells to biosensors that detect food contamination or cancerous cells. But the technology could also advance medicine and biomedical engineering, if researchers can adapt microfabrication techniques to make them compatible with the biological realm.

    So, Zhao, Min Qiu and colleagues employed a process that carves a pattern with an electron beam into a thin layer of ice coating living tissue, called ice lithography, leaving behind a design when the remaining ice sublimates. And what creature is better suited to being frozen, coated in ice, and then exposed to an electron beam than the nearly indestructible tardigrade?

    Creating Tiny Tattoos on Tardigrades

    The team put tardigrades into a cryptobiotic state (a sort of half-dead, suspended animation) by slowly dehydrating the microscopic animals. Then, the researchers placed an individual tardigrade onto a carbon-composite paper, cooled the sheet below -226 degrees Fahrenheit (-143 degrees Celsius), and covered the water bear with a protective layer of anisole — an organic compound that smells like anise. The frozen anisole protected the tardigrade’s surface from the focused electron beam as it drew the pattern.

    When exposed to the beam, the anisole reacted and formed a new biocompatible chemical compound that stuck to the tardigrade’s surface at higher temperatures. As the tardigrade warmed to room temperature under vacuum, any unreacted frozen anisole sublimated and left behind the pattern of reacted anisole. Finally, the researchers rehydrated and revived the tardigrade, which then sported a new tattoo.

    The precision of this technique allowed the team to create a variety of micropatterns: squares, dots, and lines as small as 72 nanometers wide, and even the university’s logo. Around 40% of the tardigrades survived the procedure, and the researchers say that could be improved with further fine-tuning. Most importantly, the tardigrades didn’t seem to mind their new tattoos: Once rehydrated, they showed no changes in behavior. These results indicate that this technique could be suitable for printing micro-electronics or sensors onto living tissue.

    Gavin King, a researcher credited with inventing the ice lithography technique who was not involved in this study, concludes, “it is challenging to pattern living matter, and this advance portends a new generation of biomaterial devices and biophysical sensors that were previously only present in science fiction.” After this first step, Zhao and Qiu hope that this work will enable advancements in microbial cyborgs and other biomedical applications in the future.

    Reference: “Patterning on Living Tardigrades” by Zhirong Yang, Shan Wu, Kang Zhao, Ding Zhao and Min Qiu, 1 April 2025, Nano Letters.
    DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5c00378

    The authors acknowledge funding from the National Natural Science Foundation of China.

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    10 Comments

    1. Hclew Trebor on May 1, 2025 9:41 am

      Clearly gang-related. Deport immediately!

      Reply
      • Yoda on May 1, 2025 10:15 am

        I see what you did there, Bob…

        Reply
        • Robert Welch on May 2, 2025 10:54 am

          You’re the first. Have a cold one on me. Ciao!

          Reply
      • Steven on May 1, 2025 5:58 pm

        Yes, but 60% of the tardigrades did not survive! Meaning: they were murdered during this ‘experiment’. How is this even acceptable, let alone ethical?
        I have a big problem with this. And they admit there is no real practical, useful purpose for that.

        Reply
        • Shan on May 2, 2025 11:39 pm

          Yet you probably have no problem with abortion….

          Reply
    2. Mom Bunn on May 1, 2025 2:05 pm

      And we need the ability to do this why?

      Reply
    3. Rob on May 2, 2025 7:20 am

      Just think what that means if the Russkies do it! The Tardigrade Gap, the Tardigrade Gap……..AHHHHH! The potential threat to National Security!

      Reply
    4. Robert Welch on May 2, 2025 10:53 am

      You’re the first. Have a cold one on me. Ciao!

      Reply
      • Robert Welch on May 2, 2025 10:57 am

        …Ooooops! This was my chuck-up. I blame the keyboard( that’s my excuse and I’m stickin’ to it).

        Reply
    5. Boba on May 3, 2025 4:45 pm

      What did the poor tardigrades do to you?

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

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