Modular operation of microfluidic chips for highly parallelized cell culture and liquid dosing via a fluidic circuit board

Microfluidic systems enable automated and highly parallelized cell culture with low volumes and defined liquid dosing. To achieve this, systems typically integrate all functions into a single, monolithic device as a “one size fits all” solution. However, this approach limits the end users’ (re)desig...

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Published in:Microsystems & nanoengineering Vol. 6; no. 1; p. 107
Main Authors: Vollertsen, A. R., de Boer, D., Dekker, S., Wesselink, B. A. M., Haverkate, R., Rho, H. S., Boom, R. J., Skolimowski, M., Blom, M., Passier, R., van den Berg, A., van der Meer, A. D., Odijk, M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: London Nature Publishing Group UK 30-11-2020
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Microfluidic systems enable automated and highly parallelized cell culture with low volumes and defined liquid dosing. To achieve this, systems typically integrate all functions into a single, monolithic device as a “one size fits all” solution. However, this approach limits the end users’ (re)design flexibility and complicates the addition of new functions to the system. To address this challenge, we propose and demonstrate a modular and standardized plug-and-play fluidic circuit board (FCB) for operating microfluidic building blocks (MFBBs), whereby both the FCB and the MFBBs contain integrated valves. A single FCB can parallelize up to three MFBBs of the same design or operate MFBBs with entirely different architectures. The operation of the MFBBs through the FCB is fully automated and does not incur the cost of an extra external footprint. We use this modular platform to control three microfluidic large-scale integration (mLSI) MFBBs, each of which features 64 microchambers suitable for cell culturing with high spatiotemporal control. We show as a proof of principle that we can culture human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) for multiple days in the chambers of this MFBB. Moreover, we also use the same FCB to control an MFBB for liquid dosing with a high dynamic range. Our results demonstrate that MFBBs with different designs can be controlled and combined on a single FCB. Our novel modular approach to operating an automated microfluidic system for parallelized cell culture will enable greater experimental flexibility and facilitate the cooperation of different chips from different labs. Microfluidics: Circuit boards for flexible, modular design Researchers in the Netherlands have developed a fluidic circuit board (FCB) platform which can be used to operate several microfluidic building blocks (MFBB). Highly integrated microfluidic chips are challenging to design and are customized for specific applications, limiting the possibility of re-use. A team led by Mathieu Odijk of the University of Twente sought to make flexible design alterations of microfluidic circuits possible. To that end, they developed a modular FCB platform incorporating an MFBB enabler. The enabler can operate the MFBBs in parallel or selectively and can also “save” the state of an MFBB. As a proof-of-concept, the team used their platform to combine a dosing unit and a module with 64 parallelized culture chambers. These new tools offer researchers the flexibility to combine different microfluidic chips and easily create parallelized versatile culturing systems.
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ISSN:2055-7434
2096-1030
2055-7434
DOI:10.1038/s41378-020-00216-z