A MEMS Microfluidic Platform for Focal Chemical Stimulation

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Figure 8 shows that the peak brightness and the timing of bradykinin-induced Ca 2+ fluorescence changes as a function of distance from the site of delivery:
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A MEMS Microfluidic Platform for Focal Chemical Stimulation G. Mallén-Ornelas, L. Chang, P. Y. Li, T. Hoang, L. J. Ho, K. Swertfager, E. Meng Department of Biomedical Engineering, USC, Los Angeles, CA 3. Experimental Setup 5. Discussion 1. Introduction Custom packaging is used to connect the platform to a gas-tight syringe (Fig. 3). A syringe pump controls fluid flow in the microchannel. For cell stimulation tests, a cell culture was grown either on the device itself, or on a glass cover slip that was inverted and suspended above the pore (Fig. 4). Figure 8 shows that the peak brightness and the timing of bradykinin-induced Ca2+ fluorescence changes as a function of distance from the site of delivery: Focal delivery of chemicals at cellular and sub-cellular resolution enables understanding biological responses of cells and tissue, and provides a means of interfacing with the nervous system beyond electrical stimulation. A new microfluidic platform has been developed for focal delivery of chemicals to cell cultures and tissue [1]. For the first time, fluid intake as well as ejection and passive diffusion are possible. First results of real time focal chemical stimulation of cell cultures are presented here. Cells closest to the pore have the brightest peak and are the first to increase in brightness. Cells furthest from the pore have the faintest peak brightness, and are the last to increase in brightness. This spectrum of bradykinin-induced responses shows there is a decreasing bradykinin concentration with increasing distance from the pore. Figure 4: Cell experiment setup: left panel shows a die with cells cultured on top of the microchannel and the right panel shows cells attached to an inverted glass cover slip. Figure 3: Left panel shows a die with three microchannels in an acrylic jig and the right panel shows a die in an Ultem jig. 4. PC12 Cell Experiments 2. Platform Components Experimental procedure The device was treated with polyethyleneimine (PEI) to promote cell adhesion [2]. Rat pheochromocytoma cells (PC12) [3] were cultured overnight directly on the device. Cells were loaded with fluo-4 fluorescent Ca2+ indicator dye [4]. A pulse of a 10 mM bradykinin solution was delivered through the pore (Fig. 4, left panel). Bradykinin induces a concentration-dependent release of intracellular Ca2+ stores [5]. A focal increase of fluorescence was clearly visible (Fig. 5). Data analysis Cells were identified automatically in the first image using astronomical software packages IRAF1 and DAOPHOT [6] (Fig. 6). The brightness of each detected cell was measured on every image and divided by the brightness of the same cell in the first image. The cells were grouped in concentric annuli centered on the pore. The mean light curve of all the cells in each annulus was computed and is shown in Figure 8. Parylene C microchannel (100 μm x 4 μm x 6 mm) Single central pore (5, 10, or 20 μm diameter) Integrated platinum thermal flow sensors SU-8 microfluidic interconnects The 2 μm thick Parylene wall is reinforced with a 75 μm thick layer of SU-8 microfluidic interconnect 1 mm microchannel pore SU-8 flow sensors support posts 200 m 200 m 100 m 100 m Figure 8: Comparison of mean light curves from 6 concentric 150-pixel thick annuli at different distances from the pore (indicated in the legend) after focal delivery of a burst of bradykinin. 6. Conclusion and Future Work Focal chemical delivery and stimulation from a microchannel-addressed pore has been demonstrated. In the future, integration of electrodes will enable a multi-modal neural interface. Figure 5: The left panel shows a device with a culture of PC12 cells that were treated with fluo-4 dye to allow tracking of Ca2+. The right panel shows the same device during the delivery of a burst of bradykinin through the pore. Each frame measures 1 x 1.3 mm. Figure 6: Left: a multi-layer culture of PC12 cells (bright green objects). Right: the same image with added pink circles showing objects automatically identified by astronomical software package DAOPHOT. In a second test used to simulate tissue, PC12 cells were attached to a PEI-coated glass chip which was inverted and suspended 75 mm above the pore. Continuous delivery of a ~30 mM Rhodamine B solution (Fig. 4, right panel) clearly showed a slow radial progression of Rhodamine uptake by the cells as a function of time for a flow rate from the pore of 15 nL/min (Fig. 7). References: [1] L Chang, PY Li, L Zhao, T Hoang, and E Meng. 3rd IEEE International Conference on NEMS, Sanya, China, 921-926 (2008). [2] AR Vancha, S Govindaraju, KVL Parsa, M Jasti, M Gonzalez-Garcia, RP Ballestero. BMC Biotechnol., 4, 23 (2004). [3] LA Greene, JM Aletta, A Rukenstein, SH Green. Method. Enzymol., 147, 207-216 (1987). [4] KR Gee, KA Brown, WNU Chen, J Bishop-Stewart, D Gray, I Johnson. Cell Calcium, 27(2), 97-106 (2000). [5] KC Appell, DS Barefoot. Biochem. J., 263, 11-18 (1989). [6] P Stetson, PASP 99, 191 (1987). Figure 1: Microfluidic platform photographs. 1 mm microchannel SU-8 3 2 4 1 200 m Acknowledgments: This work was supported by NSF CAREER grant number EEC-0547544. G.M.-O. is supported by a USC Provost Fellowship. G.M-O. wishes to thank the members of the Biomedical Microsystems Lab at the University of Southern California, especially Mei Li Nickles for her contribution to the fabrication of the device packaging. Figure 7: Time sequence of continuous delivery of a ~30 mM Rhodamine B solution to a culture of PC12 cells treated with fluo-4. Each frame measures 1 x 1.3 mm, and the location of the pore is indicated by the arrow. White cells are fluorescing after treatment with fluo-4, whereas black cells have taken up the infused Rhodamine B. The interval between frames 1 and 4 is eight minutes. Figure 2: 3D illustration of the device with a detail shown in the inset. The microchannel is partially removed to show the cross-sectional structure. [1] 1. IRAF is distributed by the National Optical Astronomy Observatory, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.