scholarly journals A microfluidic chip carrier including temperature control and perfusion system for long-term cell imaging

HardwareX ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. e00245
Author(s):  
Federico Cantoni ◽  
Gabriel Werr ◽  
Laurent Barbe ◽  
Ana Maria Porras ◽  
Maria Tenje
Lab on a Chip ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (16) ◽  
pp. 3341-3349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathias Ohlin ◽  
Ida Iranmanesh ◽  
Athanasia E. Christakou ◽  
Martin Wiklund

We study the effect of 1 MPa-pressure ultrasonic-standing-wave trapping of cells during one hour in a fully temperature- and acoustic streaming-controlled microfluidic chip, and conclude that the viability of lung cancer cells are not affected by this high-pressure, long-term acoustophoresis treatment.


Lab on a Chip ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (16) ◽  
pp. 3001-3010
Author(s):  
Siyi Hu ◽  
Butian Zhang ◽  
Shuwen Zeng ◽  
Liwei Liu ◽  
Ken-Tye Yong ◽  
...  

A novel and robust method for synthesizing the biofunctionalized CuInS2/ZnS quantum dots by the microfluidics chips. The synthesized quantum dot materials are easy to be modified by surface targeted biomolecules and can be used in targeted cell imaging research.


2019 ◽  
Vol 91 (24) ◽  
pp. 15908-15914 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lijun Li ◽  
Huirong Wang ◽  
Lu Huang ◽  
Sean Alan Michael ◽  
Wei Huang ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 91 (7) ◽  
pp. 894-900 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcella C.F. Dalm ◽  
Menno Jansen ◽  
Timo M.P. Keijzer ◽  
Wout M.J. van Grunsven ◽  
Arthur Oudshoorn ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 616 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ramer ◽  
B. Patel ◽  
A. Patel ◽  
V. Boguslavskiy ◽  
A. Gurary

AbstractLong term control of the substrate temperature in production scale MOVPE reactors is the most significant issue effecting yields in highly temperature sensitive epitaxial growth processes. Recent advances in non-contact emissivity compensated pyrometry wafer temperature measurements have allowed the development of a novel multi-wafer (6×2”) rotating disc MOVPE reactor with real time substrate temperature control. With this system, the substrate temperature is a directly controlled process variable, in contrast to some conventional MOVPE systems which use thermocouples for process temperature control. In addition to controlling the absolute temperature of the substrates, the temperature uniformity across the substrates is also controlled by pyrometry. This provides for a uniform temperature (+/- 1.5 °C) across the substrates independent of the flow conditions within the reactor. Thermal uniformity is also automatically maintained during temperature ramping. The highly temperature sensitive quaternary InGaAsP is used as an epitaxial metric for this novel control system, to demonstrate the advantages of pyrometry controlled substrate temperature. These advantages include: excellent long term substrate temperature reproducibility; invariance of substrate temperature to substrate doping level; the ability to transfer processes from one type of wafer carrier or reactor to another with minimal adjustment.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 892-892
Author(s):  
Lucie Leveque ◽  
Therese Vu ◽  
Rachel D Kuns ◽  
Bianca E Teal ◽  
Mary Lor ◽  
...  

Abstract Hematopoiesis originates from a rare pool of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) that are uniquely capable of both self-renewal and terminal differentiation into lineage-committed progenitor cells. Autophagy is a process of cytoplasmic protein recycling which maintains cellular homeostasis and protects the cell during periods of metabolic stress and nutrient deprivation and has an established role in the survival and function of immunological cells. Recent publications have linked autophagy with preservation of normal long term HSCs (LT-HSCs) during aging (Nature; 2013: 494:323-7). We therefore sought to determine the role of autophagy in LT-HSC function at homeostasis and during the clinically relevant stress of G-CSF-induced HSC mobilization. Using single cell imaging flow cytometry to monitor autophagosome formation in LC3-GFP transgenic mice (LC3-GFP punctae formation is a reporter of autophagy activity) we demonstrated autophagic activity in HSC populations but not in committed myeloid progenitors. In line with this, inhibition of autophagy degradation by chloroquine administration resulted in the accumulation of autophagy related protein p62 in purified HSCs compared to myeloid progenitors. To determine the contribution of autophagy to HSC development and function, we analyzed mice deficient in Atg5, a protein essential for autophagosome formation. Autophagy was not required for fetal liver (FL) HSC development, however, Atg5-/- FL HSCs showed mildly reduced long-term repopulating function in bone marrow (BM) transplantation assays (16 weeks peripheral blood (PB) engraftment Atg5-/- 83.45% vs. WT 93.10%, n=12, p<0.001). Importantly, Atg5-/- LT-HSCs (Lin-Sca-1+c-kit+Flk2-CD150+CD48-) were markedly reduced in congenic recipients compared to WT FL LT-HSCs (Atg5-/- 0.02% vs. WT 0.04%, n=11, p<0.001). Secondary competitive transplantation was used to determine the effect of autophagy loss on LT-HSC function in vivo. Atg5-/- LT-HSCs exhibited a profound impairment in the repopulation of secondary congenic recipients (Atg5-/-4.65% vs. WT 32.3%, n=5, p<0.01). Mechanistically, microarray analysis of purified LT-HSCs from Atg5-/- vs. WT FL chimeras demonstrated clear differences in gene expression by unsupervised hierarchical clustering. Differentially expressed genes included Cxcl12, Sdc2 and Apex1, regulators of HSC fate. Gene Ontology enrichment analysis demonstrated that autophagy deficient LT-HSCs had impaired metabolism, enhanced cellular differentiation, enforced proliferation and increased apoptosis. Validating these findings, there was a loss of quiescence in the Atg5-/- compared to WT LT-HSC (quiescent Atg5-/- 30% vs. WT 39%, n=16 p<0.05) and Atg5-/- FL HSCs exhibited enhanced apoptosis after culture in cytokine enriched media (Atg5-/-21.2% vs. WT 14.2%, n=5, p<0.01). Given the requirement for autophagy in homeostasis of LT-HSC and its role in proliferation and metabolic stress, we next investigated whether autophagy participated in the HSC response to G-CSF. G-CSF is commonly used to ameliorate neutropenia in patients treated with chemotherapy and is also used to mobilize HSCs for patients undergoing HSC transplantation. Using single cell imaging flow cytometry, autophagosome formation was enhanced in HSCs after 6 days of G-CSF mobilization (10mcg/day). G-CSF treatment efficiently mobilized PB neutrophils and colony forming units (CFU) in WT chimeras, however Atg5-/- chimeras showed a striking reduction in G-CSF-induced neutrophil (Atg5-/- 4.95 x106/mL vs. WT 10.46 x106/mL, n=20, p<0.0001) and PB CFU mobilization post-G-CSF (Atg5-/- 47/100µL vs. WT 126/100µL, n=5, p<0.01). BM CFU numbers were similar in Atg5-/- and WT FL chimeras both pre- and post-G-CSF mobilization. Atg5-/-neutrophils demonstrated increased apoptosis after G-CSF treatment suggesting that autophagy limits PB neutrophil survival, but not BM neutrophil development during G-CSF mobilization. These data demonstrate that autophagy is an active process in LT-HSCs and that genetic deletion of Atg5 results in the failure of adult LT-HSC maintenance and function. Autophagic activity is augmented by G-CSF-induced HSC stress and is required for G-CSF-induced HSC mobilization. These findings are particularly relevant to HSC transplantation and hematopoietic function in the context of a rapid rise in the clinical use of agents that have modulatory effects on autophagy. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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