Rewriting Life

Power from Glucose

An implanted biofuel cell may someday power medical devices.

May 18, 2010

Scientists have implanted the first functional glucose biofuel cell in a living animal. Unlike batteries that supply power to implants, a power-generating device may not have to be surgically removed and replaced, because glucose is a potentially limitless source of energy.

Sweet power: Scientists implanted a glucose-powered device into the abdominal cavity of a rat and measured its performance for three months. The glucose device consists of electrodes made of compressed graphite discs containing enzymes that catalyze the oxidation of glucose. The electrodes sit inside a dialysis bag that keeps enzymes inside but lets glucose and oxygen flow through.

The device uses enzymes to harvest energy from glucose and oxygen found naturally in the body. Past attempts at using such a device in animals have failed because the enzymes have required acidic conditions or were inhibited by charged particles in the fluid surrounding cells. But Philippe Cinquin and his team from Joseph Fourier University in Grenoble, France, overcame these obstacles by confining selected enzymes inside graphite discs that were placed into dialysis bags. Glucose and oxygen flowed into the device, but enzymes stayed in place and catalyzed the oxidation of glucose to generate electrical energy.

The team surgically implanted the device in the abdominal cavity of two rats. The maximum power of the device was 6.5 microwatts, which approaches the 10 microwatts required by pacemakers. The power remained around two microwatts for 11 days in one rat, and the other rat showed byproducts of glucose oxidation in its urine for three months, indicating that the device lasts at least that long. “This is a big breakthrough for the field of implantable biofuel cells,” says Shelley Minteer, an electrochemist at Saint Louis University.

“It’s quite an interesting paper that demonstrates for the first time that one can generate electrical power from body fluids,” says Itamar Willner, a biomolecular chemist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

The technology could be used for a range of applications, such as neural and bone-growth stimulators, drug delivery devices, insulin pumps, and biosensors, says Eileen Yu, a chemical engineer at Newcastle University. But whether enzymes remain stable for a long period of time is a concern, she says. And the efficiency of transfer of electrons between enzymes and electrodes should be improved, she says.

Cinquin believes his team can improve its efficiency. “I’m optimistic that we will get tens of milliwatts in future versions,” he says.

The authors would next like to test the device for longer periods of time in larger animals, improve its design, and incorporate biocompatible materials. “If industry finds a willingness to enter into the technological development of biofuel cells, I’m sure the use of biofuel cells to power medical implants will materialize in a very short period of time,” Willner says.