Issue 7, 2019

A novel technique for in situ uniaxial tests of self-assembled soft biomaterials

Abstract

We introduce a novel method to form 3D biomimetic tissues from a droplet of a cell–extracellular matrix (ECM) mixture on a sensor stage and to quantify tissue force and stiffness as a function of time under optical microscopes. This method exploits advances in micro–nano fabrication and capillarity for self-assembly and self-alignment of tissues on the stage. It allows simultaneous investigation of the microstructure of the tissue in situ while its mechanical response is quantified, thus linking tissue biophysics with physiology and revealing structural–functional properties of 3D tissues. We demonstrate the functionality of the stage by studying the mechanical behavior of different cell–collagen mixtures under mechanical, chemical and electrical stimulation. This includes force evolution in cell-free collagen during curing, myotubes differentiated from muscle cell–collagen/Matrigel ECM subjected to electrical stimulation, and fibroblast–collagen tissue subjected to cancer cell conditioned media (CM) and a Rho-kinase inhibitor, Y27632. Muscle contraction decreases with increasing frequency of electrical stimulation, and fibroblasts respond to CM by increasing contractility for a short time and completely relax in the presence of Y27632 but restore force with Y27632 washout.

Graphical abstract: A novel technique for in situ uniaxial tests of self-assembled soft biomaterials

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Nov 2018
Accepted
06 Feb 2019
First published
06 Feb 2019

Lab Chip, 2019,19, 1153-1161

Author version available

A novel technique for in situ uniaxial tests of self-assembled soft biomaterials

M. Elhebeary, M. A. B. Emon, O. Aydin and M. T. A. Saif, Lab Chip, 2019, 19, 1153 DOI: 10.1039/C8LC01273C

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