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Development of a custom biological scaffold for investigating ultrasound-mediated intracellular delivery

In vitro investigations of ultrasound mediated, intracellular drug and gene delivery (i.e. sonoporation) are typically carried out in cells cultured in standard plastic well plates. This creates conditions that poorly resemble in vivo conditions, as well as generating unwanted ultrasound phenomena t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Materials Science & Engineering C 2017-01, Vol.70 (Pt 1), p.461-470
Main Authors: Bui, Loan, Aleid, Adham, Alassaf, Ahmad, Wilson, Otto C., Raub, Christopher B., Frenkel, Victor
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In vitro investigations of ultrasound mediated, intracellular drug and gene delivery (i.e. sonoporation) are typically carried out in cells cultured in standard plastic well plates. This creates conditions that poorly resemble in vivo conditions, as well as generating unwanted ultrasound phenomena that may confound the interpretation of results. Here, we present our results in the development of a biological scaffold for sonoporation studies. The scaffolds were comprised of cellulose fibers coated with chitosan and gelatin. Scaffold formulation was optimized for adherence and proliferation of mouse fibroblasts in terms of the ratio and relative concentration of the two constituents. The scaffolds were also shown to significantly reduce ultrasound reflections compared to the plastic well plates. A custom treatment chamber was designed and built, and the occurrence of acoustic cavitation in the chamber during the ultrasound treatments was detected; a requirement for the process of sonoporation. Finally, experiments were carried out to optimize the ultrasound exposures to minimize cellular damage. Ultrasound exposure was then shown to enable the uptake of 100nm fluorescently labeled polystyrene nanoparticles in suspension into the cells seeded on scaffolds, compared to incubation of cell-seeded scaffolds with nanoparticles alone. These preliminary results set the basis for further development of this platform. They also provide motivation for the development of similar platforms for the controlled investigation of other ultrasound mediated cell and tissue therapies. [Display omitted] •A custom, biological scaffold was developed, comprised of chitosan and gelatin.•The scaffold formulation was optimized for adhesion and proliferation of fibroblasts.•Investigations showed the scaffolds to be less reflective to ultrasound than plastic well plates.•The scaffolds were found to be suitable for investigations of ultrasound mediated intracellular nanoparticle delivery.
ISSN:0928-4931
1873-0191
DOI:10.1016/j.msec.2016.09.029