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Low-cost, open-source cell culture chamber for regulating physiologic oxygen levels.
Marchus, Colin R N; Knudson, Jacob A; Morrison, Alexandra E; Strawn, Isabell K; Hartman, Andrew J; Shrestha, Dev; Pancheri, Nicholas M; Glasgow, Ian; Schiele, Nathan R.
Affiliation
  • Marchus CRN; University of Idaho, Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Knudson JA; University of Idaho, Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Morrison AE; University of Idaho, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Strawn IK; University of Idaho, Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Hartman AJ; University of Idaho, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Shrestha D; University of Idaho, Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Pancheri NM; University of Idaho, Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Glasgow I; University of Idaho, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
  • Schiele NR; University of Idaho, Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Moscow, ID, United States.
HardwareX ; 11: e00253, 2022 Apr.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35509920
ABSTRACT
The physiological oxygen levels for several mammalian cell types in vivo are considered to be hypoxic (low oxygen tension), but the vast majority of in vitro mammalian cell culture is conducted at atmospheric oxygen levels of around 21%. In order to understand the impact of low oxygen environments on cells, oxygen levels need to be regulated during in vitro culture. Two common methods for simulating a hypoxic environment are through the regulation of gas composition or chemical induction. Chemically mimicking hypoxia can have adverse effects such as reducing cell viability, making oxygen regulation in cell culture chambers crucial for long-term culture. However, oxygen-regulating cell culture incubators and commercial hypoxia chambers may not always be a viable option due to cost and limited customization. Other low-cost chambers have been developed, but they tend to lack control systems or are fairly small scale. Thus, the objective of this project was to design and develop a low-cost, open-source, controllable, and reproducible hypoxia chamber that can fit inside a standard cell culture incubator. This design allows for the control of O2 between 1 and 21%, while maintaining CO2 levels at 5%, as well as monitoring of temperature, pressure, and relative humidity. Testing showed our hypoxia chamber was able to maintain CO2 levels at 5% and hypoxic O2 levels at 1% and 5% for long-term cell culture. This simple and easy-to-manufacture design uses off the shelf components, and the total material cost was $832.47 (USD).
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Health_economic_evaluation Language: En Journal: HardwareX Year: 2022 Type: Article Affiliation country: United States

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Health_economic_evaluation Language: En Journal: HardwareX Year: 2022 Type: Article Affiliation country: United States