4.6 Article

Cell treatment and surface functionalization using a miniature atmospheric pressure glow discharge plasma torch

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 39, Issue 16, Pages 3508-3513

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0022-3727/39/16/S08

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A miniature atmospheric pressure glow discharge plasma torch was used to detach cells from a polystyrene Petri dish. The detached cells were successfully transplanted to a second dish and a proliferation assay showed the transplanted cells continued to grow. Propidium iodide diffused into the cells, suggesting that the cell membrane had been permeabilized, yet the cells remained viable 24 h after treatment. In separate experiments, hydrophobic, bacteriological grade polystyrene Petri dishes were functionalized. The plasma treatment reduced the contact angle from 93 degrees. to 35 degrees, and promoted cell adhesion. Two different torch nozzles, 500 mu m and 150 mu m in internal diameter, were used in the surface functionalization experiments. The width of the tracks functionalized by the torch, as visualized by cell adhesion, was approximately twice the inside diameter of the nozzle. These results indicate that the miniature plasma torch could be used in biological micropatterning, as it does not use chemicals like the present photolithographic techniques. Due to its small size and manouvrability, the torch also has the ability to pattern complex 3D surfaces.

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