(446c) Spatial Control of Probiotics Assisted By Magnetic Particles | AIChE

(446c) Spatial Control of Probiotics Assisted By Magnetic Particles

Authors 

Buss, M. - Presenter, California Institute of Technology
Ramesh, P., California Institute of Technology
Lee-Gosselin, A., California Institute of Technology
Shapiro, M., California Institute of Technology
Engineered probiotics have the potential to diagnose and treat many gastrointestinal (GI) diseases. However, most cellular agents have limited ability to selectively colonize specific targeted regions of the GI tract due to a lack of external control over their location and persistence. Magnetic fields are well suited to provide such control due to their ability to freely penetrate biological tissues, but they are difficult to apply with enough strength to directly manipulate magnetically labeled cells within deep tissue or viscous environments such as in the GI tract. Here, we show that ingestible micron-sized magnetic particles, combined with an externally applied magnetic field, act as in vivo magnetic field gradient amplifiers, enabling the trapping and retention of orally administered probiotic E. coli within the mouse GI tract. This technology improves the ability of these probiotic agents to accumulate at specific locations and stably colonize without antibiotic treatment. By enhancing the ability of GI-targeted cellular agents to be at the right place at the right time, cellular localization assisted by magnetic particles (CLAMP) adds external physical control to an important emerging class of biotherapeutics.