Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Health & Fitness
  4. News

Amazing 'biochip' reprograms your skin cells to do whatever your body needs

Add as a preferred source on Google

Imagine a smart chip that’s able to heal injuries by reprogramming skin cells when pressed onto a part of the body and given a quick jolt of electricity. It might sound like science fiction, but it’s actually the basis for new technology developed by researchers from the Ohio State University’s College of Engineering and Wexner Medical Center. Referred to as Tissue Nanotransfection (TNT), the device generates any cell type that’s required for treatment within a patient’s body. That means transforming the original cells into the building blocks necessary to do everything from repair injuries to restore the function of aging tissues, such as organs, blood vessels, and nerve cells.

In a demonstration, researchers used the biochip to reprogram skin cells to become vascular cells in a badly injured leg lacking proper blood flow. After a single week, active blood vessels appeared in the injured leg, and by the second week, the leg had been saved. Lab tests also showed that it was possible to reprogram skin cells into nerve cells. These were then injected into brain-injured mice to help them recover from strokes.

Recommended Videos

“Our TNT biochip is able to deliver large biomolecules, such as DNA and other genes, into the cells on the surface of a tissue or organ using a minimal invasive approach to achieve high dosage and minimal tissue or organ damage, not achievable by any existing technologies,” L. James Lee, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, told Digital Trends. “We found that the cell transfection effect may propagate quickly from surface cells to reach all cells in skin and muscle, leading to the formation of new blood vesicles and ‘difficult to reproduce cells,’ such as neurons in situ.”

Sci-Fi 'Biochip' Heals Injuries By Reprogramming Your Body's Cells
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Lee points out the technology’s use of a patient’s skin as a bioreactor means that the required “therapeutic cells” which are then delivered back to a damaged or malfunctioning organ carry minimal rejection and toxicity concerns.

“We believe the near-term clinical applications include wound healing via enhanced blood vessel formation in the local area, and the use of patient skin as a bioreactor to produce needed somatic cells,” Lee said. “In the long term, this technology may be extended to surgically exposed organs to facilitate treatment.”

At present, the TNT biochip has only been used in a mouse study. Next up, the team will conduct large animal studies, before hopefully progressing to clinical trials. Between this and some of the other smart biomedical breakthroughs we’re seeing, it’s certainly an exciting time for medicine.

A paper describing Ohio State University’s work was recently published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
Research finds generative AI making frauds a cakewalk for bad actors
New research shows scams that once took hours now take minutes.
Concerned man with devices medium shot

Generative AI isn’t just changing how we work, but it’s also transforming how scams are pulled off. As per Vyntra’s 2026 report, tasks that once took fraudsters over 16 hours can now be done in under 5 minutes using generative AI tools.

That’s a massive shift. What used to require skill, time, and effort can now be automated and scaled almost instantly, turning fraud into what experts are calling a $400 billion global industry.

Read more
Study says AI chatbots are increasingly ignoring humans, but it isn’t quite Skynet yet
Artificial Intelligence

Isn’t it frustrating when you ask an AI chatbot something, and halfway through, it just goes off track? You might be discussing a simple technical fix, and suddenly it throws in random suggestions — things that don’t even exist or don’t make any sense. It’s confusing, and honestly, pretty annoying.

What makes it worse is that it often feels like the chatbot isn’t even paying attention to what you said. You give it clear details, but it either ignores them or responds with something completely unrelated. That’s exactly what this study points out. AI isn’t as reliable or “obedient” as we thought, and if you’ve used one for long enough, you’ve probably noticed it yourself.

Read more
I see Apple skipping the AI hellfire, but shaping Siri as the most flexible assistant
iPhone with Active Siri

When Apple introduced Siri back in 2011, the world freaked out. A personal assistant on a phone with conversational chops elicited an audible gasp from the audience, and plenty of fear. "That it’s a sinister, potentially alien artificial intelligence that’s bound to kill us all," CNN's coverage surmised. It was a one-of-a-kind advancement, something Apple was delivering consistently back then.

And then it fell off. Now, Siri has a reputation for being, well… not exactly the sharpest voice assistant, especially in a pool of next-gen generative AI assistants such as Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT. Anyone who’s tried asking it a tricky question knows exactly what I mean — it's a drag to talk with Siri, and more importantly, get work done. But things are starting to shake up. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, a prolific all-things-Apple eavesdropper, shared yesterday that Siri might soon open its doors to third-party AI tools in a major iOS update. That’s right! Apple’s walled garden could finally be cracking.

Read more