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The significance of biochemical cues in the tumor immune microenvironment in affecting cancer metastasis is well established, but the role of physical factors in the microenvironment remains largely unexplored. In this article, we investigated how the mechanical interaction between cancer cells and immune cells, mediated by extracellular matrix (ECM), influences immune escape of cancer cells. We focus on the mechanical regulation of macrophages' targeting ability on two distinct types of colorectal carcinoma (CRC) cells with different metastatic potentials. Our results show that macrophages can effectively target CRC cells with low metastatic potential, due to the strong contraction exhibited by the cancer cells on the ECM, and that cancer cells with high metastatic potential demonstrated weakened contractions on the ECM and can thus evade macrophage attack to achieve immune escape. Our findings regarding the intricate mechanical interactions between immune cells and cancer cells can serve as a crucial reference for further exploration of cancer immunotherapy strategies.
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Neoplasias Colorretais , Matriz Extracelular , Macrófagos , Evasão Tumoral , Microambiente Tumoral , Neoplasias Colorretais/imunologia , Neoplasias Colorretais/patologia , Macrófagos/imunologia , Humanos , Microambiente Tumoral/imunologia , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Matriz Extracelular/imunologia , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Metástase Neoplásica , Animais , Camundongos , Comunicação Celular/imunologiaRESUMO
To minimize the incorrect use of antibiotics, there is a great need for rapid and inexpensive tests to identify the pathogens that cause an infection. The gold standard of pathogen identification is based on the recognition of DNA sequences that are unique for a given pathogen. Here, we propose and test a strategy to develop simple, fast, and highly sensitive biosensors that make use of multivalency. Our approach uses DNA-functionalized polystyrene colloids that distinguish pathogens on the basis of the frequency of selected short DNA sequences in their genome. Importantly, our method uses entire genomes and does not require nucleic acid amplification. Polystyrene colloids grafted with specially designed surface DNA probes can bind cooperatively to frequently repeated sequences along the entire genome of the target bacteria, resulting in the formation of large and easily detectable colloidal aggregates. Our detection strategy allows "mix and read" detection of the target analyte; it is robust and highly sensitive over a wide concentration range covering, in the case of our test target genome Escherichia coli bl21-de3, 10 orders of magnitude from [Formula: see text] to [Formula: see text] copies/mL. The sensitivity compares well with state-of-the-art sensing techniques and has excellent specificity against nontarget bacteria. When applied to real samples, the proposed technique shows an excellent recovery rate. Our detection strategy opens the way to developing a robust platform for pathogen detection in the fields of food safety, disease control, and environmental monitoring.
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DNA , Poliestirenos , Antibacterianos , Coloides , Monitoramento Ambiental , Escherichia coliRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Cancer metastasis is the main cause of mortality in cancer patients. However, the drugs targeting metastasis processes are still lacking, which is partially due to the short of effective in vitro model for cell invasion studies. The traditional 2-D culture method cannot reveal the interaction between cells and the surrounding extracellular matrix during invasion process, while the animal models usually are too complex to explain mechanisms in detail. Therefore, a precise and efficient 3-D in vitro model is highly desirable for cell invasion studies and drug screening tests. METHODS: Precise micro-fabrication techniques are developed and integrated with soft hydrogels for constructing of 3-D lung-cancer micro-environment, mimicking the pulmonary gland or alveoli as in vivo. RESULTS: A 3-D in vitro model for cancer cell culture and metastasis studies is developed with advanced micro-fabrication technique, combining microfluidic system with soft hydrogel. The constructed microfluidic platform can provide nutrition and bio-chemical factors in a continuous transportation mode and has the potential to form stable chemical gradient for cancer invasion research. Hundreds of micro-chamber arrays are constructed within the collagen gel, ensuring that all surrounding substrates for tumor cells are composed of natural collagen hydrogel, like the in vivo micro-environment. The 3-D in vitro model can also provide a fully transparent platform for the visual observation of the cell morphology, proliferation, invasion, cell-assembly, and even the protein expression by immune-fluorescent tests if needed. The lung-cancer cells A549 and normal lung epithelial cells (HPAEpiCs) have been seeded into the 3-D system. It is found out that cells can normally proliferate in the microwells for a long period. Moreover, although the cancer cells A549 and alveolar epithelial cells HPAEpiCs have the similar morphology on 2-D solid substrate, in the 3-D system the cancer cells A549 distributed sparsely as single round cells on the extracellular matrix (ECM) when they attached to the substrate, while the normal lung epithelial cells can form cell aggregates, like the structure of normal tissue. Importantly, cancer cells cultured in the 3-D in vitro model can exhibit the interaction between cells and extracellular matrix. As shown in the confocal microscope images, the A549 cells present round and isolated morphology without much invasion into ECM, while starting from around Day 5, cells changed their shape to be spindle-like, as in mesenchymal morphology, and then started to destroy the surrounding ECM and invade out of the micro-chambers. CONCLUSIONS: A 3-D in vitro model is constructed for cancer cell invasion studies, combining the microfluidic system and micro-chamber structures within hydrogel. To show the invasion process of lung cancer cells, the cell morphology, proliferation, and invasion process are all analyzed. The results confirmed that the micro-environment in the 3-D model is vital for revealing the lung cancer cell invasion as in vivo.
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Matriz Extracelular , Neoplasias Pulmonares , Animais , Colágeno/metabolismo , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Humanos , Hidrogéis/análise , Hidrogéis/química , Hidrogéis/metabolismo , Neoplasias Pulmonares/metabolismo , Invasividade Neoplásica , Microambiente TumoralRESUMO
Characterization of biomolecular dynamics at cellular membranes lags far behind that in solutions because of challenges to measure transmembrane trafficking with subnanometer precision. Herein, by introducing nonfluorescent quenchers into extracellular environment of live cells, we adopted Förster resonance energy transfer from one donor to multiple quenchers to measure positional changes of biomolecules in plasma membranes. We demonstrated the method by monitoring flip-flops of individual lipids and by capturing transient states of the host defense peptide LL-37 in plasma membranes. The method was also applied to investigate the interaction of the necroptosis-associated protein MLKL with plasma membranes, showing a few distinct depths of MLKL insertion. Our method is especially powerful to quantitate the dynamics of proteins at the cytosolic leaflets of plasma membranes which are usually not accessible by conventional techniques. The method will find wide applications in the systematic analysis of fundamental cellular processes at plasma membranes.
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Transferência Ressonante de Energia de Fluorescência , Lipídeos , Membrana CelularRESUMO
Cell migration, which can be significantly affected by intracellular signaling pathways and extracellular matrix, plays a crucial role in many physiological and pathological processes. Cell migration is typically modeled as a persistent random walk, which depends on two critical motility parameters, i.e., migration speed and persistence time. It is generally very challenging to efficiently and accurately quantify the migration dynamics from noisy experimental data. Here, we introduce the normalized Shannon entropy (SE) based on the FPS of cellular velocity autocovariance function to quantify migration dynamics. The SE introduced here possesses a similar physical interpretation as the Gibbs entropy for thermal systems in that SE naturally reflects the degree of order or randomness of cellular migration, attaining the maximal value of unity for purely diffusive migration (i.e., SE = 1 for the most "random" dynamics) and the minimal value of 0 for purely ballistic dynamics (i.e., SE = 0 for the most "ordered" dynamics). We also find that SE is strongly correlated with the migration persistence but is less sensitive to the migration speed. Moreover, we introduce the time-varying SE based on the WPS of cellular dynamics and demonstrate its superior utility to characterize the time-dependent persistence of cell migration, which typically results from complex and time-varying intra- or extracellular mechanisms. We employ our approach to analyze experimental data of in vitro cell migration regulated by distinct intracellular and extracellular mechanisms, exhibiting a rich spectrum of dynamic characteristics. Our analysis indicates that the SE and wavelet transform (i.e., SE-based approach) offers a simple and efficient tool to quantify cell migration dynamics in complex microenvironment.
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Matriz Extracelular , Movimento Celular , Difusão , EntropiaRESUMO
Cell migration, which is regulated by intracellular signaling pathways (ICSP) and extracellular matrix (ECM), plays an indispensable role in many physiological and pathological process such as normal tissue development and cancer metastasis. However, there is a lack of rigorous and quantitative tools for analyzing the time-varying characteristics of cell migration in heterogeneous microenvironment, resulted from, e.g. the time-dependent local stiffness due to microstructural remodeling by migrating cells. Here, we develop a wavelet-analysis approach to derive the time-dependent motility parameters from cell migration trajectories, based on the time-varying persistent random walk model. In particular, the wavelet denoising and wavelet transform are employed to analyze migration velocities and obtain the wavelet power spectrum. Subsequently, the time-dependent motility parameters are derived via Lorentzian power spectrum. Our results based on synthetic data indicate the superiority of the method for estimating the intrinsic transient motility parameters, robust against a variety of stochastic noises. We also carry out a systematic parameter study and elaborate the effects of parameter selection on the performance of the method. Moreover, we demonstrate the utility of our approach via analyzing experimental data ofin vitrocell migration in distinct microenvironments, including the migration of MDA-MB-231 cells in confined micro-channel arrays and correlated migration of MCF-10A cells due to ECM-mediated mechanical coupling. Our analysis shows that our approach can be as a powerful tool to accurately derive the time-dependent motility parameters, and further analyze the time-dependent characteristics of cell migration regulated by complex microenvironment.
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Movimento Celular , Análise de Ondaletas , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Células Epiteliais , HumanosRESUMO
Correlated cell migration in fibrous extracellular matrix (ECM) is important in many biological processes. During migration, cells can remodel the ECM, leading to the formation of mesoscale structures such as fiber bundles. However, how such mesoscale structures regulate correlated single-cells migration remains to be elucidated. Here, using a quasi-3D in vitro model, we investigate how collagen fiber bundles are dynamically re-organized and guide cell migration. By combining laser ablation technique with 3D tracking and active-particle simulations, we definitively show that only the re-organized fiber bundles that carry significant tensile forces can guide strongly correlated cell migration, providing for the first time a direct experimental evidence supporting that matrix-transmitted long-range forces can regulate cell migration and self-organization. This force regulation mechanism can provide new insights for studies on cellular dynamics, fabrication or selection of biomedical materials in tissue repairing, and many other biomedical applications.
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Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Colágeno/metabolismo , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Mecanotransdução Celular/fisiologia , Actinas/metabolismo , Animais , Colágeno/química , Cães , Compostos Heterocíclicos de 4 ou mais Anéis/farmacologia , Humanos , Células Madin Darby de Rim Canino , Miosinas/antagonistas & inibidores , Paxilina/metabolismo , Resistência à TraçãoRESUMO
In this work, we constructed a Collagen I-Matrigel composite extracellular matrix (ECM). The composite ECM was used to determine the influence of the local collagen fiber orientation on the collective intravasation ability of tumor cells. We found that the local fiber alignment enhanced cell-ECM interactions. Specifically, metastatic MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells followed the local fiber alignment direction during the intravasation into rigid Matrigel (â¼10 mg/mL protein concentration).
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Colágeno/química , Metástase Neoplásica/patologia , Neoplasias/patologia , Biópsia , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Proliferação de Células , Progressão da Doença , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Feminino , Humanos , Imagem com Lapso de TempoRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Autologous transfusion of intraoperative cell salvage blood may be a potential method to decrease the need for allogeneic packed red blood cell transfusions after cesarean delivery, although there are limited data on the benefits of this method. This study evaluated the implementation of targeted intraoperative cell salvage during cesarean delivery in women at increased risk for hemorrhage at the Women's and Children's Hospital in Ningbo, China. METHODS: All women who underwent cesarean delivery >28 weeks of gestation were included in the study. The period before intraoperative cell collection (October 1, 2010, to August 31, 2012, n = 11,322) was compared with the postimplementation period (September 1, 2012, to June 30, 2015, n = 17,456) using an interrupted time series analysis. In the postimplementation period, women suspected to be at increased risk of the need for a blood transfusion (1604, 9.2%) underwent intraoperative cell salvage collection. The primary outcomes were the monthly rate of allogeneic packed red blood cell use and the incidence of clinical manifestation of acute blood transfusion reactions. RESULTS: The mean (standard deviation) estimated monthly allogeneic packed blood cell transfusion rate at the end of the 57-month study was 2.2% ± 0.7% with the implementation compared with 2.7% ± 0.9% without, difference -0.5%, 95% CI, -1.4% to 0.3%; P = .22. The mean number of allogeneic units transfused per patient was 4.1 ± 0.4 units with implementation and 3.9 ± 0.9 units without, difference 0.2, 95% CI, -1.7 to 1.1 units; P = .69. Intraoperative cell salvage blood was reinfused in 757 (47%) and wasted in 847 (53%) cases. The monthly intraoperative allogeneic packed red blood cells use rate was lower after implementation (difference -0.7%, 95% CI, -0.1% to -1.4%; P = .03); however, the monthly postpartum allogeneic packed red blood cell use rate was unchanged (difference -0.2%, 95% CI, -0.4% to 0.7%; P = .56). The clinical manifestation of acute blood transfusion reactions rate was unchanged (difference -2%, 99% CI, -9% to 5%; P = .55) between the periods. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that targeted intraoperative cell salvage in women undergoing cesarean delivery was associated with less allogeneic blood exposure in the operating room, but not in the postoperative period. Intraoperative cell salvage in targeted cesarean deliveries was not associated with a lesser allogeneic red blood cell exposure over the hospital admission period. The lack of adverse events associated with intraoperative cell salvage supports the safety of intraoperative cell salvage in cesarean delivery.
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Transfusão de Sangue Autóloga/métodos , Cesárea/métodos , Transfusão de Eritrócitos/métodos , Maternidades , Recuperação de Sangue Operatório/métodos , Adulto , Cesárea/efeitos adversos , China/epidemiologia , Estudos de Coortes , Feminino , Humanos , Recém-Nascido , Complicações Intraoperatórias/diagnóstico , Complicações Intraoperatórias/epidemiologia , Complicações Intraoperatórias/prevenção & controle , GravidezRESUMO
Liver cancer, characterized as a kind of malignant tumor within the digestive system, poses great health harm, and immune escape stands out as an important reason for its occurrence and development. Chemokines, pivotal in guiding immune cells' migration, is necessary to initiate and deliver an effective anti-tumor immune response. Therefore, understanding the chemotactic environment and identifying chemokines that regulate recruitment of immune cells to the tumor microenvironment (TME) are critical to improve current immunotherapy interventions. Herein, we report a well-defined inverse opal scaffold generated with a microfluidic emulsion template for the construction of a vascularized liver tumor model, offering insights into immune cells' recruitment. Due to the excellent 3D porous morphology of the inverse opal scaffold, human hepatocellular carcinoma cells can aggregate in the pores of the scaffold to form uniform multicellular tumor spheroids. More attractively, the vascularized liver tumor model can be achieved by constructing a 3D co-culture system involving endothelial cells and hepatocellular carcinoma cells. The results demonstrate that the 3D co-cultured tumor cells increase the neutrophil chemokines remarkably and recruit neutrophils to tumor tissues, then promote tumor progression. This approach opens a feasible avenue for realizing a vascularized liver tumor model with a reliable immune microenvironment close to that of a solid tumor of liver cancer.
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Técnicas de Cocultura , Neoplasias Hepáticas , Microambiente Tumoral , Humanos , Neoplasias Hepáticas/imunologia , Neoplasias Hepáticas/patologia , Carcinoma Hepatocelular/imunologia , Carcinoma Hepatocelular/patologia , Técnicas Analíticas Microfluídicas/instrumentação , Dispositivos Lab-On-A-Chip , Quimiocinas/metabolismo , Células Endoteliais da Veia Umbilical Humana , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Alicerces Teciduais/química , Células Hep G2 , Esferoides CelularesRESUMO
The unprecedented demand for variants diagnosis in response to the COVID-19 epidemic has brought the spotlight onto rapid and accurate detection assays for single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at multiple locations. However, it is still challenging to ensure simplicity, affordability, and compatibility with multiplexing. Here, a novel technique is presented that combines peptide nucleic acid (PNA) clamps and near-infrared (NIR)-driven digital polymerase chain reaction (dPCR) to identify the Omicron and Delta variants. This is achieved by simultaneously identifying highly conserved mutated signatures at codons 19, 614, and 655 of the spike protein gene. By microfluidically introducing graphene-oxide-nanocomposite into the assembled gelatin microcarriers, they achieved a rapid temperature ramping-up rate and switchable gel-to-sol phase transformation synchronized with PCR activation under NIR irradiation. Two sets of duplex PCR reactions, each classifying respective PNA probes, are emulsified in parallel and illuminated together using a homemade vacuum-based droplet generation device and a programmable NIR control module. This allowed for selective amplification of mutant sequences due to single-base-pair mismatch with PNA blockers. Sequence-recognized bioreactions and fluorescent-color scoring enabled quick identification of variants. This technique achieved a detection limit of 5,100 copies and a 5-fold quantitative resolution, which is promising to unfold minor differences and dynamic changes.
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COVID-19 , Ácidos Nucleicos Peptídicos , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2/genética , COVID-19/diagnóstico , Ácidos Nucleicos Peptídicos/genética , Corantes , Teste para COVID-19RESUMO
Cell migration is crucial for numerous physiological and pathological processes. A cell adapts its morphology, including the overall and nuclear morphology, in response to various cues in complex microenvironments, such as topotaxis and chemotaxis during migration. Thus, the dynamics of cellular morphology can encode migration strategies, from which diverse migration mechanisms can be inferred. However, deciphering the mechanisms behind cell migration encoded in morphology dynamics remains a challenging problem. Here, we present a powerful universal metric, the Cell Morphological Entropy (CME), developed by combining parametric morphological analysis with Shannon entropy. The utility of CME, which accurately quantifies the complex cellular morphology at multiple length scales through the deviation from a perfectly circular shape, is illustrated using a variety of normal and tumor cell lines in different in vitro microenvironments. Our results show how geometric constraints affect the MDA-MB-231 cell nucleus, the emerging interactions of MCF-10A cells migrating on collagen gel, and the critical transition from proliferation to invasion in tumor spheroids. The analysis demonstrates that the CME-based approach provides an effective and physically interpretable tool to measure morphology in real-time across multiple length scales. It provides deeper insight into cell migration and contributes to the understanding of different behavioral modes and collective cell motility in more complex microenvironments.
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Entropia , Movimento Celular , Linhagem Celular TumoralRESUMO
Droplet microfluidic technology has revolutionized biomolecular analytical research, as it has the capability to reserve the genotype-to-phenotype linkage and assist for revealing the heterogeneity. Massive and uniform picolitre droplets feature dividing solution to the level that single cell and single molecule in each droplet can be visualized, barcoded, and analyzed. Then, the droplet assays can unfold intensive genomic data, offer high sensitivity, and screen and sort from a large number of combinations or phenotypes. Based on these unique advantages, this review focuses on up-to-date research concerning diverse screening applications utilizing droplet microfluidic technology. The emerging progress of droplet microfluidic technology is first introduced, including efficient and scaling-up in droplets encapsulation, and prevalent batch operations. Then the new implementations of droplet-based digital detection assays and single-cell muti-omics sequencing are briefly examined, along with related applications such as drug susceptibility testing, multiplexing for cancer subtype identification, interactions of virus-to-host, and multimodal and spatiotemporal analysis. Meanwhile, we specialize in droplet-based large-scale combinational screening regarding desired phenotypes, with an emphasis on sorting for immune cells, antibodies, enzymatic properties, and proteins produced by directed evolution methods. Finally, some challenges, deployment and future perspective of droplet microfluidics technology in practice are also discussed.
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Técnicas Biossensoriais , Técnicas Analíticas Microfluídicas , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Microfluídica/métodos , Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana , Proteínas , Técnicas Analíticas Microfluídicas/métodos , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala/métodosRESUMO
The lung is the respiratory organ of the human body, and the alveoli are the most basic functional units of the lung. Herein, a photo-responsive stretchable Janus membrane was proposed for the reconstruction of the alveolar-capillary barrier in vitro. This Janus membrane was fabricated by photocrosslinking methylacrylamide gelatin (Gelma) hydrogel and N-isoacrylamide (NIPAM) hydrogel mixed with graphene oxide (GO). The Gelma hydrogel containing large amounts of collagen provides a natural extracellular matrix environment for cell growth, while the temperature-sensitive NIPAM hydrogel combined with GO gives the membrane a light-controlled stretching property. Based on this Janus membrane, an open polydimethylsiloxane chip was established to coculture alveolar epithelial cells and vascular endothelial cells at the air-liquid interface. It was demonstrated that the alveolar epithelial cells cultured on the upper side of the Janus membrane could express epithelial cell marker protein E-cadherin and secrete alveolar surfactant. In addition, VE-cadherin, an endothelium-specific protein located at the junction between endothelial cells, was also detected in vascular endothelial cells cultured on the underside of Janus membrane. The constructed lung tissue model with the dynamically stretchable Janus membrane is well-suited for COVID-19 infection studies and drug testing.
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Microglia are resident macrophage cells in the central nervous system that search for pathogens or abnormal neural activities and migrate to resolve the issues. The effective search and targeted motion of macrophages mean dearly to maintaining a healthy brain, yet little is known about their migration dynamics. In this work, we study microglial motion with and without the presence of external mechanostimuli. We discover that the cells are promptly attracted by the applied forces (i.e., mechanotaxis), which is a tactic behavior as yet unconfirmed in microglia. Meanwhile, in both the explorative and the targeted migration, microglia display dynamics that is strikingly analogous to bacterial run-and-tumble motion. A closer examination reveals that microglial run-and-tumble is more sophisticated, e.g., they display a short-term memory when tumbling and rely on active steering during runs to achieve mechanotaxis, probably via the responses of mechanosensitive ion channels. These differences reflect the sharp contrast between microglia and bacteria cells (eukaryotes vs. prokaryotes) and their environments (compact tissue vs. fluid). Further analyses suggest that the reported migration dynamics has an optimal search efficiency and is shared among a subset of immune cells (human monocyte and macrophage). This work reveals a fruitful analogy between the locomotion of 2 remote systems and provides a framework for studying immune cells exploring complex environments.
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Cellular collective motion in confluent epithelial monolayers is involved in many processes such as embryo development, carcinoma invasion, and wound healing. The development of new chemical strategies to achieve large-scale control of cells' collective motion is essential for biomedical applications. Here a series of DNA nanostructures with different dimensions were synthesized and their influences on cells' collective migration and packing behaviors in epithelial monolayers were investigated. We found that the framed DNA nanoassemblies effectively reduced the cells' speed by increasing the rigidity of cells, while the lipid-DNA micelles had a more pronounced effect on cells' projection area and shape factor. These DNA nanostructures all significantly enhanced the dependence of cells' speed on their shape factor. Our results indicate that cells' mobility in monolayers can be manipulated by chemical intercellular interactions without any genetic intervention. This may provide a new chemical strategy for tissue engineering and tumor therapy.
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Clinical pulmonary surfactant is routinely used to treat premature newborns with respiratory distress syndrome, and has shown great potential in alleviating a number of neonatal and adult respiratory diseases. Despite extensive study of chemical composition, surface activity, and clinical performance of various surfactant preparations, a direct comparison of surfactant films is still lacking. In this study, we use atomic force microscopy to characterize and compare four animal-derived clinical surfactants currently used throughout the world, i.e., Survanta, Curosurf, Infasurf and BLES. These modified-natural surfactants are further compared to dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), a synthetic model surfactant of DPPC:palmitoyl-oleoyl phosphatidylglycerol (POPG) (7:3), and endogenous bovine natural surfactant. Atomic force microscopy reveals significant differences in the lateral structure and molecular organization of these surfactant preparations. These differences are discussed in terms of DPPC and cholesterol contents. We conclude that all animal-derived clinical surfactants assume a similar structure of multilayers of fluid phospholipids closely attached to an interfacial monolayer enriched in DPPC, at physiologically relevant surface pressures. This study provides the first comprehensive survey of the lateral structure of clinical surfactants at various surface pressures. It may have clinical implications on future application and development of surfactant preparations.
Assuntos
Microscopia de Força Atômica/métodos , Surfactantes Pulmonares/química , 1,2-Dipalmitoilfosfatidilcolina/química , Animais , Bovinos , Humanos , Modelos Químicos , Fosfatidilgliceróis/química , TermodinâmicaRESUMO
Intratracheal administration of corticosteroids using a natural pulmonary surfactant as a delivery vehicle has recently received significant attention in hopes of treating premature newborns with or at high risk for chronic lung disease. As a new practice, both the surfactant preparation used as the carrier and the corticosteroid delivered as the anti-inflammatory agent, and their mixing ratios, have not been standardized and optimized. Given the concern that corticosteroids delivered via a pulmonary surfactant may compromise its surface activity and thus worsen lung mechanics, the present study was carried out to characterize the biophysical interaction between a natural surfactant preparation, Infasurf, and two commonly used inhaled corticosteroids, budesonide and beclomethasone dipropionate (BDP). Based on surface activity measurements by the Langmuir balance and lateral film structure studied by atomic force microscopy, our findings suggest that when Infasurf is used as a carrier, a budesonide concentration less than 1 wt% of surfactant or a BDP concentration up to 10 wt % should not significantly affect the biophysical properties of Infasurf, thus being feasible for pulmonary delivery. Increasing corticosteroid concentration beyond this range leads to early collapse of the surfactant film due to increased film fluidization. Our study further suggests that different affinities to the surfactant films are responsible for the different behavior of budesonide and BDP. In addition to the translational value in treating chronic lung disease, this study may also have implications in inhaled steroid therapy to treat asthma.
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Digital PCR (dPCR) is built on partitioning reagent to the extent that single template molecules are amplified and visualized individually, whereby offers higher precision and other better indicators than the former PCR techniques. Accordingly, dPCR is particular suited for precision medicine applications that require accurate molecular characterization with high sensitivity. This review aims to summarize different applications of dPCR in precision medicine. The state-of-the-art progress of dPCR technique is first introduced, including novel prototype machines and dPCR-integrated biochips. Then the clinical applications based on dPCR technique are briefly described, for instance, detecting biomarkers from tissues and various biopsies components including cell free DNA, circulating tumor cells, extracellular vesicles, and proteins. These emerging dPCR applications have been accepted as auxiliary diagnostic methods in various areas like oncology, infectious disease, and the like. Meanwhile, a usage overview is provided, focusing on successful clinical pilot studies that dPCR is utilized to improve the performances of rare event detection, fine resolution of gene expression analysis, and multiplexing. Finally, some implications and challenges in future research concerning dPCR technique are also discussed.
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Técnicas Biossensoriais , Medicina de Precisão , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/métodos , TecnologiaRESUMO
Droplet microfluidic technology provides a new platform for controllable generation of microdroplets and droplet-derived materials. In particular, because of the ability in high-throughput production and accurate control of the size, structure, and function of these materials, droplet microfluidics presents unique advantages in the preparation of functional microcarriers, i.e., microsized liquid containers or solid particles that serve as substrates of biomolecules or cells. These microcarriers could be extensively applied in the areas of cell culture, tissue engineering, and drug delivery. In this review, we focus on the fabrication of microcarriers from droplet microfluidics, and discuss their applications in the biomedical field. We start with the basic principle of droplet microfluidics, including droplet generation regimes and its control methods. We then introduce the fabrication of biomedical microcarriers based on single, double, and multiple emulsion droplets, and emphasize the various applications of microcarriers in biomedical field, especially in 3D cell culture, drug development and biomedical detection. Finally, we conclude this review by discussing the limitations and challenges of droplet microfluidics in preparing microcarriers. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Because of its precise control and high throughput, droplet microfluidics has been employed to generate functional microcarriers, which have been widely used in the areas of drug development, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine. This review is significant because it emphasizes recent progress in research on droplet microfluidics in the preparation and application of biomedical microcarriers. In addition, this review suggests research directions for the future development of biomedical microcarriers based on droplet microfluidics by presenting existing shortcomings and challenges.