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Engineered 3D tissue models for cell-laden microfluidic channels
Authors:Young S. Song   Richard L. Lin   Grace Montesano   Naside G. Durmus   Grace Lee   Seung-Schik Yoo   Emre Kayaalp   Edward H?ggstr?m   Ali Khademhosseini  Utkan Demirci
Affiliation:(1) Bio-Acoustic-MEMS in Medicine Lab, HST Center for Bioengineering, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 65 Landsdowne Street #252, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA;(2) Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, 44 Cummington Street, Boston, MA 02215, USA;(3) Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA;(4) Yeditepe University Faculty of Medicine, 26 Agustos Yerlesimi, 34755 Kayisdagi, Istanbul, Turkey;(5) Electronics Research Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Helsinki, POB 64,, 00014, Finland;(6) Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Harvard-MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Abstract:Delivery of nutrients and oxygen within three-dimensional (3D) tissue constructs is important to maintain cell viability. We built 3D cell-laden hydrogels to validate a new tissue perfusion model that takes into account nutrition consumption. The model system was analyzed by simulating theoretical nutrient diffusion into cell-laden hydrogels. We carried out a parametric study considering different microchannel sizes and inter-channel separation in the hydrogel. We hypothesized that nutrient consumption needs to be taken into account when optimizing the perfusion channel size and separation. We validated the hypothesis by experiments. We fabricated circular microchannels (r = 400 μm) in 3D cell-laden hydrogel constructs (R = 7.5 mm, volume = 5 ml). These channels were positioned either individually or in parallel within hydrogels to increase nutrient and oxygen transport as a way to improve cell viability. We quantified the spatial distribution of viable cells within 3D hydrogel scaffolds without channels and with single- and dual-perfusion microfluidic channels. We investigated quantitatively the cell viability as a function of radial distance from the channels using experimental data and mathematical modeling of diffusion profiles. Our simulations show that a large-channel radius as well as a large channel to channel distance diffuse nutrients farther through a 3D hydrogel. This is important since our results reveal that there is a close correlation between nutrient profiles and cell viability across the hydrogel. Young Seok Song and Richard L. Lin have contributed equally to this contribution
Keywords:3D tissue engineering  Tissue perfusion  Microfluidic channel  Scaffold
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