Publication | Open Access
Inducing chemotactic and haptotactic cues in microfluidic devices for three-dimensional <i>in vitro</i> assays
31
Citations
42
References
2014
Year
Controlled Chemical GradientsEngineeringBiomimetic MaterialsOrgan-on-a-chipBiomedical EngineeringCell-substrate InteractionsHaptotactic CuesBiosensing SystemsMicrofluidic DevicesBiomaterial ModelingMatrix BiologyMicrofluidicsBiofluid DynamicBiophysicsDiffusion ExperimentsBiomedical AnalysisLab-on-a-chipDrug Delivery SystemsMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Microfluidic devices allow for the production of physiologically relevant cellular microenvironments by including biomimetic hydrogels and generating controlled chemical gradients. During transport, the biomolecules interact in distinct ways with the fibrillar networks: as purely diffusive factors in the soluble fluid or bound to the matrix proteins. These two main mechanisms may regulate distinct cell responses in order to guide their directional migration: caused by the substrate-bound chemoattractant gradient (haptotaxis) or by the gradient established within the soluble fluid (chemotaxis). In this work 3D diffusion experiments, in combination with ELISA assays, are performed using microfluidic platforms in order to quantify the distribution of PDGF-BB and TGF-β1 across collagen and fibrin gels. Furthermore, to gain a deeper understanding of the fundamental processes, the experiments are reproduced by computer simulations based on a reaction-diffusion transport model. This model yields an accurate prediction of the experimental results, confirming that diffusion and binding phenomena are established within the microdevice.
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