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Reliable cell retention of mammalian suspension cells in microfluidic cultivation chambers

Microfluidic cultivation, with its high level of environmental control and spatio-temporal resolution of cellular behavior, is a well-established tool in today’s microfluidics. Yet, reliable retention of (randomly) motile cells inside designated cultivation compartments still represents a limitation...

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Published in:Scientific reports 2023-03, Vol.13 (1), p.3857-3857, Article 3857
Main Authors: Schmitz, Julian, Stute, Birgit, Täuber, Sarah, Kohlheyer, Dietrich, von Lieres, Eric, Grünberger, Alexander
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description Microfluidic cultivation, with its high level of environmental control and spatio-temporal resolution of cellular behavior, is a well-established tool in today’s microfluidics. Yet, reliable retention of (randomly) motile cells inside designated cultivation compartments still represents a limitation, which prohibits systematic single-cell growth studies. To overcome this obstacle, current approaches rely on complex multilayer chips or on-chip valves, which makes their application for a broad community of users infeasible. Here, we present an easy-to-implement cell retention concept to withhold cells inside microfluidic cultivation chambers. By introducing a blocking structure into a cultivation chamber’s entrance and nearly closing it, cells can be manually pushed into the chamber during loading procedures but are unable to leave it autonomously in subsequent long-term cultivation. CFD simulations as well as trace substance experiments confirm sufficient nutrient supply within the chamber. Through preventing recurring cell loss, growth data obtained from Chinese hamster ovary cultivation on colony level perfectly match data determined from single-cell data, which eventually allows reliable high throughput studies of single-cell growth. Due to its transferability to other chamber-based approaches, we strongly believe that our concept is also applicable for a broad range of cellular taxis studies or analyses of directed migration in basic or biomedical research.
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subjects 631/57
631/61
639/166
Animals
Cell growth
CHO Cells
Cricetinae
Cricetulus
Cultivation
Environmental control
Humanities and Social Sciences
Medical research
Microfluidic Analytical Techniques - methods
Microfluidics
Microfluidics - methods
multidisciplinary
Nutrient loss
Retention
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
title Reliable cell retention of mammalian suspension cells in microfluidic cultivation chambers
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