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1.
Lab Chip ; 23(22): 4834-4847, 2023 11 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37853793

ABSTRACT

Integrating flowing cells, such as immune cells or circulating tumour cells, within a microphysiological system is crucial for body-on-a-chip applications. However, ensuring unimpeded recirculation of cells is a significant challenge. Closed microfluidic devices have a no-slip boundary condition along channel walls and a defined chip geometry (laminar flow) that hinders the ability to freely control cell flow. Open microfluidic devices, where the bottom device boundary is an air-liquid interface (ALI), e.g., hanging drop networks (HDNs), offer the advantage of an easily-actuatable fluid-phase geometry, where cells can either flow or stagnate. In this paper, we optimized a hanging-drop-integrated pneumatic-pump system for closed-loop recirculation of particles (i.e., beads or cells). Experiments with both beads and cells in cell culture medium initially resulted in particle stagnation, which was suggestive of a pseudo-no-slip boundary condition at the ALI. Transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering measurements of the ALI suggested that aggregation of submicron-scale cell-culture-medium components is the cause of the pseudo-no-slip boundary condition. We used the finite element method to study the forces on particles at the ALI and to optimize HDN design (drop aperture) and operation (drop height) parameters. Based on this analysis, we report a phase diagram delineating the conditions for free flow or stagnation of particles at the ALI of hanging drops. Using our experimental setup with 3.5 mm drop apertures, we conducted particle flow experiments while actuating drop heights. We confirmed the ability to control the flow or stagnation of particles by actuating the height of hanging drops: a drop height over 300 µm led to particle stagnation and a drop height under 300 µm allowed for particle flow. This particle-flow control, combined with the ease of integrating scaffold-free organ models (microtissues or organoids) in HDNs, constitutes the basis for an experimental setup enabling the control of the residence time of single cells around 3D organ models.


Subject(s)
Cell Culture Techniques , Spheroids, Cellular , Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Cell Movement , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , Microphysiological Systems
2.
Adv Healthc Mater ; 12(6): e2202506, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36651229

ABSTRACT

Despite increasing survival rates of pediatric leukemia patients over the past decades, the outcome of some leukemia subtypes has remained dismal. Drug sensitivity and resistance testing on patient-derived leukemia samples provide important information to tailor treatments for high-risk patients. However, currently used well-based drug screening platforms have limitations in predicting the effects of prodrugs, a class of therapeutics that require metabolic activation to become effective. To address this issue, a microphysiological drug-testing platform is developed that enables co-culturing of patient-derived leukemia cells, human bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells, and human liver microtissues within the same microfluidic platform. This platform also enables to control the physical interaction between the diverse cell types. Herein, it is made possible to recapitulate hepatic prodrug activation of ifosfamide in their platform, which is very difficult in traditional well-based assays. By testing the susceptibility of primary patient-derived leukemia samples to the prodrug ifosfamide, sample-specific sensitivities to ifosfamide in primary leukemia samples are identified. The microfluidic platform is found to enable the recapitulation of physiologically relevant conditions and the testing of prodrugs including short-lived and unstable metabolites. The platform holds great potential for clinical translation and precision chemotherapy selection.


Subject(s)
Leukemia , Prodrugs , Humans , Child , Prodrugs/pharmacology , Prodrugs/therapeutic use , Prodrugs/metabolism , Ifosfamide/pharmacology , Ifosfamide/therapeutic use , Ifosfamide/metabolism , Leukemia/metabolism , Coculture Techniques , Liver/metabolism
3.
Lab Chip ; 17(23): 4124-4133, 2017 11 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29094740

ABSTRACT

We developed an automated microfluidic chip that can measure dynamic cytokine secretion and transcription factor activation from cells responding to time-varying stimuli. Our chip patterns antibodies, exposes cells to time-varying inputs, measures cell secretion dynamics, and quantifies secretion all in the same platform. Secretion dynamics are measured using micrometer-sized immunoassays patterned directly inside the chip. All processes are automated, so that no user input is needed for conducting a complete cycle of device preparation, cell experiments, and secretion quantification. Using this system, we simulated an immune response by exposing cells to stimuli indicative of chronic and increasing inflammation. Specifically, we quantified how macrophages respond to changing levels of the bacterial ligand LPS, in terms of transcription factor NF-κB activity and TNF cytokine secretion. The integration of assay preparation with experimental automation of our system simplifies protocols for measuring cell responses to dynamic and physiologically relevant conditions and enables simpler and more error free means of microfluidic cellular investigations.


Subject(s)
Cell Culture Techniques/instrumentation , Cytokines/analysis , Cytokines/metabolism , Immunoassay/instrumentation , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , Animals , Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Equipment Design , Macrophages/cytology , Macrophages/metabolism , Mice , RAW 264.7 Cells
4.
Cell Rep ; 15(2): 411-22, 2016 Apr 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27050527

ABSTRACT

Cells receive time-varying signals from the environment and generate functional responses by secreting their own signaling molecules. Characterizing dynamic input-output relationships in single cells is crucial for understanding and modeling cellular systems. We developed an automated microfluidic system that delivers precisely defined dynamical inputs to individual living cells and simultaneously measures key immune parameters dynamically. Our system combines nanoliter immunoassays, microfluidic input generation, and time-lapse microscopy, enabling study of previously untestable aspects of immunity by measuring time-dependent cytokine secretion and transcription factor activity from single cells stimulated with dynamic inflammatory inputs. Employing this system to analyze macrophage signal processing under pathogen inputs, we found that the dynamics of TNF secretion are highly heterogeneous and surprisingly uncorrelated with the dynamics of NF-κB, the transcription factor controlling TNF production. Computational modeling of the LPS/TLR4 pathway shows that post-transcriptional regulation by TRIF is a key determinant of noisy and uncorrelated TNF secretion dynamics in single macrophages.


Subject(s)
Cells/immunology , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , 3T3 Cells , Animals , Cell Separation , Clone Cells , Cytokines/analysis , Gene Expression Regulation , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , Lipopolysaccharides , Macrophages/metabolism , Mice , Models, Biological , NF-kappa B/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Toll-Like Receptor 4/metabolism , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(19): 7950-5, 2011 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21498687

ABSTRACT

Current models of stem cell biology assume that normal and neoplastic stem cells reside at the apices of hierarchies and differentiate into nonstem progeny in a unidirectional manner. Here we identify a subpopulation of basal-like human mammary epithelial cells that departs from that assumption, spontaneously dedifferentiating into stem-like cells. Moreover, oncogenic transformation enhances the spontaneous conversion, so that nonstem cancer cells give rise to cancer stem cell (CSC)-like cells in vitro and in vivo. We further show that the differentiation state of normal cells-of-origin is a strong determinant of posttransformation behavior. These findings demonstrate that normal and CSC-like cells can arise de novo from more differentiated cell types and that hierarchical models of mammary stem cell biology should encompass bidirectional interconversions between stem and nonstem compartments. The observed plasticity may allow derivation of patient-specific adult stem cells without genetic manipulation and holds important implications for therapeutic strategies to eradicate cancer.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Breast/cytology , Cell Dedifferentiation , Adult Stem Cells/cytology , Adult Stem Cells/physiology , Animals , Breast/physiology , Breast Neoplasms/physiopathology , CD24 Antigen/metabolism , Cell Dedifferentiation/physiology , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/pathology , Cells, Cultured , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Epithelial Cells/physiology , Female , Humans , Hyaluronan Receptors/metabolism , Mammary Glands, Animal/cytology , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred NOD , Mice, Nude , Mice, SCID , Neoplastic Stem Cells/pathology , Neoplastic Stem Cells/physiology , Stem Cell Transplantation , Transplantation, Heterologous
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