Title :
Single-cell-based measurement of supraphysiological thermal injury in carcinoma cells on a microchip
Author :
Lu, Yun-Hung ; Huang, Ching-Te ; Tsai, Cheng-Han ; Jen, Chun-Ping
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Nat. Chung Cheng Univ., Chiayi, Taiwan
Abstract :
Hyperthermia affects certain regulatory proteins, kinases or cyclins, resulting in alternations to the cell cycle and even to apoptosis. Damage to the cell plasma membrane is a key factor in the killing of a cell by hyperthermia. Analysis at the single-cell level is necessary for understanding the fundamental mechanisms of hyperthermia-induced cell death and the generation of thermotolerance in surviving cells. The main purpose of this study is to fabricate a hydrogel chip with microwells for cellular patterning and to demonstrate the measurement of supraphysiological thermal injury in human carcinoma cells (HeLa cells) at the single-cell level. To accomplish this, measurement of membrane injury by dye leakage post-thermal insult was performed and reported in this work. For cell concentrations at 0.5 × 106 cells/mL, the occupancy of cells on the microchip with 40 μm microwells was up to 86.6%, a value far higher than that found on the 30 μm microwells (approximately 78.5%). The fluorescent images showed that calcein leakage occurred when cell membranes were damaged under supraphysiological temperatures between 43 and 50°C. The single-cell-based experiment of thermal injury in the microchip with hydrogel microwells was therefore successfully demonstrated.
Keywords :
biological techniques; biomedical measurement; biomembranes; cancer; cellular biophysics; hyperthermia; HeLa cells; cell cycle alternations; cell plasma membrane; cell thermotolerance; cellular apoptosis; cellular patterning; dye leakage post thermal insult; fluorescent images; human carcinoma cells; hydrogel chip; hyperthermia induced cell death; membrane injury measurement; microchip; microwells; single cell based measurement; supraphysiological thermal injury; hydrogel; micropattern; single cell; supraphysiological; thermal injury;
Conference_Titel :
Nano/Micro Engineered and Molecular Systems (NEMS), 2010 5th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Xiamen
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6543-9
DOI :
10.1109/NEMS.2010.5592121