Microfluidic hydrodynamic cellular patterning for systematic formation of co-culture spheroids
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Morell Hita, MaríaEditorial
Integr Biol (Camb)
Fecha
2009Referencia bibliográfica
Torisawa YS, Mosadegh B, Luker GD, Morell M, O'Shea KS, Takayama S. Microfluidic hydrodynamic cellular patterning for systematic formation of co-culture spheroids. Integr Biol (Camb). 2009 Dec;1(11-12):649-54. doi: 10.1039/b915965g. Epub 2009 Oct 22. PMID: 20027373; PMCID: PMC2825702.
Patrocinador
NIH support grants: HL-084370, P50CA093990, R01CA136553, 1R01CA136829, GM-06695, and NS-048187Resumen
This paper describes a microfluidic method to form co-culture spheroids of various geometries and
compositions in order to manipulate cell–cell interaction dynamics. The cellular patterning is
performed in a two-layered microfluidic device that sandwiches a semi-porous membrane so that
flow occurs from the top channel through the membrane to the bottom channel. Arbitrary cellular
arrangements are enabled by regulating the geometric features of the bottom channel so that as culture
media drains, the flow hydrodynamically focuses (aggregates) cells onto the membrane only over
the regions of the bottom channel. Furthermore, when the top channel has multiple inlets, cells can
be seeded in adjacent laminar streams, allowing different cell types to be patterned simultaneously
in well defined spatial arrangements. Interestingly, the initial cell positioning of certain cell types
can result in two juxtaposed non-concentric “Janus” spheroids, rather than homogeneous mixtures
or layered shell structures. Therefore, the initial position of cells prior to aggregation can influence
the final configuration within a co-culture spheroid. When Janus spheroids were constructed from
mouse embryonic stem (mES) cells and hepatocytes, the mES cells differentiated in a spatially
distinct pattern dictated by the position of the hepatocytes. This contrasts with uniform mES
differentiation observed when co-culture spheroids are formed by the conventional method of
randomly mixing the two cell types. This cellular patterning method opens new possibilities for
understanding and manipulating interactions between different cell types in 3D.