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Microfluidic In Vitro Platform for (Nano)Safety and (Nano)Drug Efficiency Screening

  • Yvonne Kohl
  • , Margit Biehl
  • , Sarah Spring
  • , Michelle Hesler
  • , Vladimir Ogourtsov
  • , Miomir Todorovic
  • , Joshua Owen
  • , Elisabeth Elje
  • , Kristina Kopecka
  • , Oscar Hernando Moriones
  • , Neus G. Bastús
  • , Peter Simon
  • , Tibor Dubaj
  • , Elise Rundén-Pran
  • , Victor Puntes
  • , Nicola William
  • , Hagen von Briesen
  • , Sylvia Wagner
  • , Nikil Kapur
  • , Espen Mariussen
  • Andrew Nelson, Alena Gabelova, Maria Dusinska, Thomas Velten, Thorsten Knoll
  • Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering
  • University of Leeds
  • Norwegian Institute for Air Research
  • University of Oslo
  • Slovak Academy of Sciences
  • Edifici CM7
  • Autonomous University of Barcelona
  • Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava
  • Vall d'Hebron Research Institute
  • ICREA

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Microfluidic technology is a valuable tool for realizing more in vitro models capturing cellular and organ level responses for rapid and animal-free risk assessment of new chemicals and drugs. Microfluidic cell-based devices allow high-throughput screening and flexible automation while lowering costs and reagent consumption due to their miniaturization. There is a growing need for faster and animal-free approaches for drug development and safety assessment of chemicals (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemical Substances, REACH). The work presented describes a microfluidic platform for in vivo-like in vitro cell cultivation. It is equipped with a wafer-based silicon chip including integrated electrodes and a microcavity. A proof-of-concept using different relevant cell models shows its suitability for label-free assessment of cytotoxic effects. A miniaturized microscope within each module monitors cell morphology and proliferation. Electrodes integrated in the microfluidic channels allow the noninvasive monitoring of barrier integrity followed by a label-free assessment of cytotoxic effects. Each microfluidic cell cultivation module can be operated individually or be interconnected in a flexible way. The interconnection of the different modules aims at simulation of the whole-body exposure and response and can contribute to the replacement of animal testing in risk assessment studies in compliance with the 3Rs to replace, reduce, and refine animal experiments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2006012
JournalSmall
Volume17
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Apr 2021

Keywords

  • (nano)safety
  • drug efficiency
  • in vitro culture-on-chip
  • microfluidic platform
  • miniaturized incubator microscope

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