Title :
Array arrangement of living cells on self-assembled-monolayer pattern chip with femtosecond laser inducing mechanical force "micro tsunami"
Author :
Kira, Atushi ; Okano, Kunihisa ; Hosokawa, Yoichiroh ; Fuwa, Koh ; Yuyama, Jyunpei ; Naito, Akira ; Masuhara, Hiroshi
Author_Institution :
R&D Div., ULVAC, Inc, Chigasaki
Abstract :
We have developed a novel method for arranging living cells on a glass chip with micrometer-scale cell-adhering areas by applying femtosecod laser. To form the cell-adhesion area, the chip surface was first covalently modified with perfluoroalkyl self-assembled-monolayer (Rf-SAM) and then etched by oxygen-plasma. The Rf-surface and the etched surface were characterized using solvent contact-angle analysis. It was confirmed that the Rf-surface has low surface-free-energy as contact angle was 118.2deg and 69.0deg with water and hexadecane, respectively. Thus the Rf-surface has repellent characteristics for polar and nonpolar materials. Protein adsorption on the fabricated Rf-micropattern chip was evaluated using R-phycoerythrin. There was little signal derived from R-phycoerythrin on the Rf-surface indicating that Rf-SAM inhibits the protein adsorption onto the surface. When mammalian PC12 cells were cultured on the Rf-micropattern chip, the cells adhered and grew up only on the etched glass surface but not on Rf-surface. Cultured cells were detached one by one from a culture substrate and transported onto a specific cell-adhering area on the Rf-micropattern chip by using femtosecond-laser-induced mechanical force that we named "micro tsunami".
Keywords :
arrays; bio-inspired materials; cellular biophysics; monolayers; proteins; self-assembly; R-phycoerythrin; array arrangement; femtosecond laser; glass chip; living cells; mechanical force; micro tsunami; micrometer-scale cell-adhering areas; oxygen-plasma; perfluoroalkyl self-assembled-monolayer; protein adsorption; self-assembled-monolayer pattern chip; Cells (biology); Chemical lasers; Chemistry; Etching; Glass; Materials science and technology; Optical arrays; Proteins; Solvents; Tsunami;
Conference_Titel :
Micro-NanoMechatronics and Human Science, 2008. MHS 2008. International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Nagoya
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2918-9
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2919-6
DOI :
10.1109/MHS.2008.4752483