Title :
A tubing-free microfluidic wound-healing assay quantifying vascular smooth muscle cell migration
Author :
Wei, Y. ; Chen, F. ; Zhang, T. ; Chen, D. ; Jia, X. ; Tong, J. ; Wang, J. ; Guo, W. ; Chen, J.
Author_Institution :
State Key Lab. of Transducer Technol., Inst. of Electron., Beijing, China
Abstract :
This paper presents a tubing-free microfluidic wound healing assay to quantify the migration of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). In this study, gravity was used to generate a laminar flow within microfluidic channels, enabling wound formation of VSMCs in a tubing-free manner. The effects of channel geometries (i.e., variations in channel height and PDMS based channel thickness) and chemokines (i.e., fetal bovine serum, platelet derived growth factor BB and tumor necrosis factor alpha) on the migration of VSMCs were investigated and compared. In addition, the proposed microfluidic platform was used to quantify the migration of two types of VSMCs (i.e., human aortic vascular smooth muscle cell line and primary human aortic vascular smooth cells). As a platform technology, this tubing-free microfluidic wound healing assay may function as a new model to study VSMC migration.
Keywords :
bioMEMS; biomedical equipment; cell motility; laminar flow; microchannel flow; molecular biophysics; muscle; proteins; wounds; PDMS based channel thickness; channel geometry; channel height; chemokines; fetal bovine serum; human aortic vascular smooth muscle cell line; laminar flow; microfluidic channels; platelet derived growth factor BB; primary human aortic vascular smooth cell; tubing-free microfluidic wound healing assay; tumor necrosis factor alpha; vascular smooth muscle cell migration; Chemicals; Fabrication; Gravity; Microfluidics; Microscopy; Muscles; Wounds; Cell Migration; Microfluidics; Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells; Wound Healing;
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems (TRANSDUCERS), 2015 Transducers - 2015 18th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Anchorage, AK
DOI :
10.1109/TRANSDUCERS.2015.7181291