期刊
LAB ON A CHIP
卷 9, 期 19, 页码 2782-2788出版社
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b906006e
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资金
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG [SFB 486, SPP 1313, SCHN 1077]
- Elite Netzwerk Bayern
- German Excellence Initiative via the Nanosystems Initiative Munich (NIM)
- Bayerische Forschungsstiftung
- German government (BMBF)
- European Community [NMP4-CT-2004-500039]
The interaction of targeted drug carriers with epithelial and endothelial barriers in vivo is largely determined by the dynamics of the body fluids. To simulate these conditions in binding assays, a fully biocompatible in vitro model was developed which can accurately mimic a wide range of physiological flow conditions on a thumbnail-format cell-chip. This acoustically-driven microfluidic system was used to study the interaction characteristics of protein-coated particles with cells. Poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) microparticles (2.9 +/- 1 mu m) were conjugated with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA-MP, cytoadhesive protein) or bovine serum albumin (BSA-MP, non-specific protein) and their binding to epithelial cell monolayers was investigated under stationary and flow conditions. While mean numbers of 1500 +/- 307 mm(-2) WGA-MP and 94 +/- 64 mm(-2) BSA-MP respectively were detected to be cell-bound in the stationary setup, incubation at increasing flow velocities increasingly antagonized the attachment of both types of surface-modified particles. However, while binding of BSA-MP was totally inhibited by flow, grafting with WGA resulted in a pronounced anchoring effect. This was indicated by a mean number of 747 +/- 241 mm(-2) and 104 +/- 44 mm(-2) attached particles at shear rates of 0.2 s(-1) and 1 s(-1) respectively. Due to the compactness of the fluidic chip which favours parallelization, this setup represents a highly promising approach towards a screening platform for the performance of drug delivery vehicles under physiological flow conditions. In this regard, the flow-chip is expected to provide substantial information for the successful design and development of targeted micro- and nanoparticulate drug carrier systems.
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