4.4 Article

Endothelialized Microfluidics for Studying Microvascular Interactions in Hematologic Diseases

期刊

出版社

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/3958

关键词

Bioengineering; Issue 64; Biomedical Engineering; endothelial cells; HUVEC; microfabrication; microvasculature; SU-8; micromolding; soft lithography

资金

  1. NIH [K08-HL093360]
  2. Institute for Electronics and Nanotechnology at the Georgia Institute of Technology
  3. UCSF REAC award
  4. NIH Nanomedicine Development Center [PN2EY018244]
  5. Center for Endothelial Cell Biology of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta

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Advances in microfabrication techniques have enabled the production of inexpensive and reproducible microfluidic systems for conducting biological and biochemical experiments at the micro-and nanoscales (1,2). In addition, microfluidics have also been specifically used to quantitatively analyze hematologic and microvascular processes, because of their ability to easily control the dynamic fluidic environment and biological conditions(3-6). As such, researchers have more recently used microfluidic systems to study blood cell deformability, blood cell aggregation, microvascular blood flow, and blood cell-endothelial cell interactions(6-13). However, these microfluidic systems either did not include cultured endothelial cells or were larger than the sizescale relevant to microvascular pathologic processes. A microfluidic platform with cultured endothelial cells that accurately recapitulates the cellular, physical, and hemodynamic environment of the microcirculation is needed to further our understanding of the underlying biophysical pathophysiology of hematologic diseases that involve the microvasculature. Here, we report a method to create an endothelialized in vitro model of the microvasculature, using a simple, single mask microfabrication process in conjunction with standard endothelial cell culture techniques, to study pathologic biophysical microvascular interactions that occur in hematologic disease. This microvasculature-on-a-chip provides the researcher with a robust assay that tightly controls biological as well as biophysical conditions and is operated using a standard syringe pump and brightfield/fluorescence microscopy. Parameters such as microcirculatory hemodynamic conditions, endothelial cell type, blood cell type(s) and concentration(s), drug/inhibitory concentration etc., can all be easily controlled. As such, our microsystem provides a method to quantitatively investigate disease processes in which microvascular flow is impaired due to alterations in cell adhesion, aggregation, and deformability, a capability unavailable with existing assays.

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