4.4 Article

Semi-confined compression of microfabricated polymerized biomaterial constructs

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Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0960-1317/21/5/054014

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Funding

  1. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [CHRPJ 323533-06]
  3. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  4. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada
  5. Canada Research Chairs in Mechanobiology
  6. Micro and Nano Engineering Systems

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Mechanical forces are critical parameters in engineering functional tissue because of their established influence on cellular behaviour. However, identifying ideal combinations of mechanical, biomaterial and chemical stimuli to obtain a desired cellular response requires high-throughput screening technologies, which may be realized through microfabricated systems. This paper reports on the development and characterization of a MEMS device for semi-confined biomaterial compression. An array of these devices would enable studies involving mechanical deformation of three-dimensional biomaterials, an important parameter in creating physiologically relevant microenvironments in vitro. The described device has the ability to simultaneously apply a range of compressive mechanical stimuli to multiple polymerized hydrogel microconstructs. Local micromechanical strains generated within the semi-confined hydrogel cylinders are characterized and compared with those produced in current micro-and macroscale technologies. In contrast to previous work generating unconfined compression in microfabricated devices, the semi-confined compression model used in this work generates uniform regions of strain within the central portion of each hydrogel, demonstrated here to range from 20% to 45% across the array. The uniform strains achieved simplify experimental analysis and improve the utility of the compression platform. Furthermore, the system is compatible with a wide variety of polymerizable biomaterials, enhancing device versatility and usability in tissue engineering and fundamental cell biology studies.

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