NUS OstraBot: Record-Breaking Biohybrid Swimming Robot Powered by Self-Trained Lab-Grown Muscles

NUS Leads Biohybrid Robotics Revolution with OstraBot Innovation

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🌊 NUS Engineers Pioneer Self-Training for Lab-Grown Muscles

The National University of Singapore (NUS) has marked a significant milestone in biohybrid robotics with the development of a groundbreaking self-training platform for lab-grown skeletal muscle tissues. Biohybrid robots, which integrate living biological components such as cultured muscle cells with synthetic scaffolds or structures, promise actuators that are inherently soft, adaptive, and energy-efficient, particularly at microscales where traditional motors falter. Led by Assistant Professor Tan Yu Jun from the NUS Department of Mechanical Engineering within the College of Design and Engineering, the team addressed a core limitation: the historically low force output of these cultured muscles, which has hindered practical robot performance. 77 76

This innovation draws inspiration from arm-wrestling dynamics, mechanically coupling two muscle tissues via a simple sliding block mechanism. As the cells mature over a week—specifically from day three when spontaneous contractions begin—the tissues pull antagonistically against each other. This creates continuous cycles of shortening and lengthening without any external power, controls, or intervention, effectively allowing the muscles to 'exercise' autonomously. The result? Record-breaking force generation: a maximum of 7.05 millinewtons (mN) and stress of 8.51 mN per square millimeter, over an order of magnitude higher than previous benchmarks for this commercially available skeletal muscle cell line, ensuring reproducibility and affordability.

OstraBot: The Fastest Skeletal Muscle-Powered Swimmer

Integrating these supercharged muscles into a novel robot dubbed OstraBot, the NUS team engineered an ostraciiform swimmer mimicking the locomotion of boxfish—characterized by a rigid body and oscillating twin tails for efficient propulsion. A single self-trained muscle drives the flexible tails, optimized through a physiology-based computational model that simulates the entire actuation chain: from electrical stimulation triggering calcium signaling, to muscle activation, force production, and hydrodynamic thrust. 77

Under 3 Hz electrical stimulation at optimal tail stiffness, OstraBot achieves a swimming speed of 467 millimeters per minute—the fastest ever recorded for any skeletal muscle-driven biohybrid robot. This surpasses identical designs with conventionally cultured muscles by more than threefold, demonstrating tangible gains from the self-training paradigm. Moreover, the robot exhibits precise controllability: speed scales with electrical field strength, and it responds dynamically to acoustic cues, such as starting or stopping on a clap, akin to neural-muscle interfaces in living organisms. Previously, such robots either moved incessantly without regulation or lacked the power for visible responses.

OstraBot biohybrid robot swimming with twin tails propelled by lab-grown muscle tissues

Assistant Professor Tan Yu Jun: Trailblazer in Sustainable Soft Robotics

At the helm is Asst Prof Tan Yu Jun, whose research at NUS Mechanical Engineering centers on intelligent and sustainable materials for soft robotics. Her lab explores self-healing biomaterials and self-adaptive systems that detect defects and initiate repairs, promoting 'biocircular' robots—devices designed for full lifecycle sustainability, from creation to benign degradation. Tan's accolades include being named in MIT Technology Review's Innovators Under 35 Asia-Pacific list and the 'Science, She Says!' award, underscoring her impact. 20

"The purpose of this study was not just to build a faster robot, but to remove a fundamental bottleneck in the field and open the door to high-performance biohybrid systems designed with sustainability in mind," Tan explained. Her vision extends beyond speed, emphasizing long-term stability, energy efficiency, and environmental responsibility—critical for real-world deployment.

Technical Innovations Driving the Self-Training Platform

The self-training process unfolds step-by-step: Day 1-2 involves seeding commercial C2C12 mouse skeletal myoblasts onto gelatin-methacrylate hydrogels patterned for alignment. By day 3, spontaneous twitches emerge as cells fuse into multinucleated myotubes. The antagonistic coupling via the sliding block harnesses these for progressive overload, peaking efficacy around day 5. No nutrients, media changes, or stimuli are needed beyond standard culture conditions, making it scalable.

  • Force Amplification: Self-trained muscles yield 7.05 mN peak force vs. ~0.5 mN untrained.
  • Stress Metrics: 8.51 mN/mm², enabling meaningful thrust.
  • Model Optimization: Finite element simulations predict optimal geometries, reducing trial-and-error.

This plug-and-play actuator paves the way for standardized biohybrid components across labs worldwide.

Singapore's Thriving Ecosystem for Soft Robotics Research

NUS exemplifies Singapore's ascent in soft robotics, ranked among the global top 5 for research output. The Advanced Robotics Centre at NUS fosters interdisciplinary work, from AI-powered microswimmers to manta ray-inspired autonomous underwater vehicles. Complementing this, NTU Singapore advances neuron-inspired controllers for compliant grippers. Government backing amplifies these efforts: In 2026, Singapore committed over S$1 billion (about US$779 million) to public AI research through 2030, alongside S$37 billion for broader R&I, positioning universities as hubs for translating lab breakthroughs to industry.NUS News on OstraBot 77 47

Such investments yield tangible outcomes: NUS spinouts in sustainable materials and bioactuators attract venture capital, while collaborations with A*STAR enhance biomaterial scaling.

Biomedical and Environmental Applications on the Horizon

OstraBot's prowess unlocks applications where rigidity fails. In biomedicine, temporary implants could deliver drugs, clear blockages, or monitor tissues before dissolving—no retrieval surgery required. Environmentally, biodegradable swarms could survey delicate ecosystems like coral reefs or polluted wetlands, powered quietly and sustainably.Nature Communications paper 67

  • Drug Delivery: Navigate vasculature with adaptive propulsion.
  • Sensing: Integrate lab-grown sensors for real-time data.
  • Degradability: Use transient materials for zero-waste ops.

Tan's team eyes full biodegradability next, aligning with Singapore's green tech ambitions.

Challenges Overcome and Remaining Hurdles

Key challenges included harnessing uncontrolled twitches productively and scaling force without compromising viability. The antagonistic trainer resolved this elegantly. Future hurdles: extending lifespan beyond weeks, enhancing nutrient delivery in vivo, and neural integration for sophisticated behaviors. Physiology models will iterate designs, while Singapore's talent pipeline—bolstered by programs like SkillsFuture—supplies skilled researchers.

Career Opportunities in Singapore's Robotics Higher Education

For aspiring engineers, NUS offers PhD scholarships, research assistantships in soft robotics labs. Singapore's ecosystem demands interdisciplinary talent: mechanical engineers versed in biomaterials, AI specialists for control, biologists for tissue engineering. With unemployment low and salaries competitive (median ~S$5,500 for fresh tech grads), it's a prime destination. 56

Programs like NUS Integrated Sustainable Design emphasize real-world impact, preparing graduates for roles in A*STAR, medtech firms, or startups.

Asst Prof Tan Yu Jun and team with self-training muscle platform at NUS

Global Context and Singapore's Competitive Edge

While Harvard and EPFL advance hybrid walkers, NUS leads in sustainable swimmers. Singapore's strategic investments—S$1B AI, quantum hubs—ensure agility amid US-China tensions. By 2030, intl student growth to 200k targets robotics as a pillar, fostering diverse teams.

This OstraBot feat positions NUS as a beacon for higher education innovation, blending academia, industry, and policy for societal good.

Future Outlook: Toward Autonomous Biohybrid Swarms

Tan envisions swarms of OstraBot variants for collective tasks, with onboard 'homeostasis' for self-repair. Collaborations with NTU on AI controllers could enable learning behaviors. As Singapore eyes Smart Nation 2.0, such research drives economic resilience, job creation, and global leadership in green robotics.

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Frequently Asked Questions

🤖What is OstraBot and how does it work?

OstraBot is a biohybrid swimming robot developed at NUS, inspired by boxfish locomotion. It uses a single self-trained lab-grown skeletal muscle to drive twin flexible tails, achieving 467 mm/min—the record speed for such systems. Propulsion stems from 3 Hz electrical stimulation optimized via physiological modeling.

💪How does the self-training platform strengthen muscles?

Two muscle tissues are coupled via a sliding block, leveraging spontaneous contractions during maturation (days 3-5) for antagonistic 'exercise.' This yields 7.05 mN force and 8.51 mN/mm² stress without external input. Details in NUS report.

👩‍🔬Who leads the NUS OstraBot research?

Asst Prof Tan Yu Jun from NUS Mechanical Engineering heads the project, focusing on sustainable soft robotics and self-healing materials. Her team includes PhD student Zhou Jinrun.

🏊What makes OstraBot faster than previous biohybrid robots?

Self-trained muscles provide over 3x thrust vs. conventional cultures. Optimized tail stiffness and controllability (e.g., clap response) enable precise, high-speed swimming.

🩺What are the applications of this NUS technology?

Biomedical: temporary implants for drug delivery. Environmental: monitoring reefs or wetlands with biodegradable swarms. Emphasizes sustainability in soft robotics.

🇸🇬How does Singapore support robotics research at NUS?

S$1B+ in AI/R&I funding through 2030, Advanced Robotics Centre at NUS, collaborations with A*STAR. Positions Singapore as a soft robotics leader.

⚙️What challenges remain for biohybrid swimmers like OstraBot?

Long-term viability, in vivo nutrient delivery, neural integration. Future: full biodegradability and swarm intelligence.

🎓Career prospects in NUS soft robotics?

PhDs, research roles in mech eng, biomaterials. High demand, competitive salaries (S$5,500+ median for grads). Explore research jobs.

📄Where was OstraBot research published?

Nature Communications, with preprint on bioRxiv. First author Dr. Chen Pengyu.

🔊How does OstraBot demonstrate controllability?

Speed tunes with electrical field; responds to sound (clap to start/stop), mimicking nerve signals—unlike prior weak or uncontrolled bots.

🧬What cell line powers OstraBot muscles?

Commercial C2C12 mouse skeletal myoblasts, ensuring accessibility and reproducibility across labs.