Microfluidic Platform for the Long-Term On-Chip Cultivation of Mammalian Cells for Lab-On-A-Chip Applications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Design Aspects
2.1. Concept
2.2. Design of the Hydrogel Membranes
2.3. Dimensioning of the Culture Chamber
- : Thinner hydrogel membranes result in wider chambers. Without any membrane (), the maximum width is 3.9 mm. As mentioned above, the membrane is more robust if (i.e., 0.8 mm and 1.1 mm), resulting in a width of the chamber of 3.2 mm and 2.9 mm, respectively.
- h: The height has a major influence on the width of the growth chamber as shown in Figure 3a. Considering that the width of the hydrogel is proportional to the chamber height, there is an upper limit for the width of the growth chamber as
- : The filling factor that describes how much area is covered with cells also has a major influence on the width of the growth area as shown in Figure 3b. Less cells obviously result in wider chambers. For , the width is reduced to 1.9 mm. However, mammalian cells need space to grow and proliferate in order to avoid stress on the cells. Consequently, limiting the filling factor to is necessary for healthy cells, which means that the cells have to be split and a part of the cells have to be removed once 50% of the growth area is covered.
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Materials
3.2. Fabrication
3.3. Assembly
3.4. Preparation of the Devices
4. Experiments and Results
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
- continuous but independent supply of gases and nutrients,
- low requirements of the pump regarding flow speed, precision and stability,
- no need for an external incubator,
- no shear stress onto the cells,
- the culture chamber could be closed once the cells are inserted resulting in a low contamination risk.
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
DRIE | Deep reactive ion etching |
FEM | Finite-element-method |
GMEM | Glasgow Minimum Essential Medium |
LoC | Lab-on-a-chip |
MDCK | Madin Darby Canine Kidney cell line |
OCR | Oxygen consumption rate |
ODT | Octadecanethiol |
PDMS | Polydimethylsiloxane |
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Description | Year | Comment | Nutrient Supply | Gas Supply | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blood-brain-barrier | 2012 | Coculture and conductivity measurements | Perfusion and diffusion through membrane | Diffusion through PDMS | [2] |
PDMS-hydrogel hybrid reactor | 2013 | 3D-culture on multi-electrode array | Diffusion through 3D-culture | Diffusion through PDMS | [3] |
Lung cancer chip | 2016 | 3D-2D-coculture | Perfusion, diffusion through 3D-culture | Diffusion through PDMS | [5] |
3D-cell culture | 2007 | - | Diffusion through 3D-culture | Diffusion through PDMS | [6] |
Breast-cancer analysis | 2015 | 3D-cell culture | Diffusion through 3D-culture | Diffusion through PDMS | [7] |
Blood-vessel- on-a-chip | 2013 | 3D-Coculture | not possible | Diffusion through PDMS | [8] |
Liver-on-a-chip | 2016 | Modular and pumpless platform for 2D-3D-coculture and electrical measurements | Perfusion and diffusion through 3D-culture | Oxygen dissolved in medium | [9] |
Cell invasion | 2016 | Measurement of cell movement through membrane | Exchange of medium | Open reservoir | [12] |
Integrated perfusion system | 2011 | Integration of heater, pump and electrical readout | Perfusion | Diffusion through PDMS | [13] |
Shear-stress culture | 2014 | Chamber with different shear stress on cells | Perfusion | Diffusion through PDMS | [15] |
Assay for coculturing | 2012 | Suitable for 2D and 3D-cell cultures | Diffusion through hydrogel | Diffusion through PDMS | [16] |
Micro-lung | 2017 | Integration of membrane and electrical readout | Perfusion | Diffusion through PDMS | [17] |
3D-cell culture | 2005 | Close chip out of glass and silicon | Perfusion and diffusion through 3D-culture | perfusion with fresh medium | [18] |
Cancer metastasis under hypoxia | 2014 | Integration of gas supply and oxygen sensor | Perfusion | Diffusion through PDMS | [20] |
CO2-control culture | 2011 | Gradient of CO2 | Perfusion | Diffusion through PDMS | [21] |
Hypoxia monitoring of cells | 2015 | Oxygen control and sensing for 3D-cell cultures | Perfusion | Diffusion through PDMS | [22] |
On-chip incubator | 2014 | Integration of oxygen supply | Perfusion | Oxygen dissolved in medium | [23] |
This work | 2017 | Platform for entire passaging process | Diffusion through hydrogel | Diffusion through hydrogel | - |
Compound | Metabolic Rate | Concentration | Exchange Time | Diffusion Coefficient |
---|---|---|---|---|
Glucose | 250 | 25 | 28 | |
Lactate | 490 | 20 | 11 | |
Ammonium | 11 | 2 | 50 | |
Oxygen | 20 | 0.2 | 2.7 |
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Bunge, F.; Driesche, S.V.d.; Vellekoop, M.J. Microfluidic Platform for the Long-Term On-Chip Cultivation of Mammalian Cells for Lab-On-A-Chip Applications. Sensors 2017, 17, 1603. https://doi.org/10.3390/s17071603
Bunge F, Driesche SVd, Vellekoop MJ. Microfluidic Platform for the Long-Term On-Chip Cultivation of Mammalian Cells for Lab-On-A-Chip Applications. Sensors. 2017; 17(7):1603. https://doi.org/10.3390/s17071603
Chicago/Turabian StyleBunge, Frank, Sander Van den Driesche, and Michael J. Vellekoop. 2017. "Microfluidic Platform for the Long-Term On-Chip Cultivation of Mammalian Cells for Lab-On-A-Chip Applications" Sensors 17, no. 7: 1603. https://doi.org/10.3390/s17071603
APA StyleBunge, F., Driesche, S. V. d., & Vellekoop, M. J. (2017). Microfluidic Platform for the Long-Term On-Chip Cultivation of Mammalian Cells for Lab-On-A-Chip Applications. Sensors, 17(7), 1603. https://doi.org/10.3390/s17071603