| Literature DB >> 30570812 |
Hans Kleine-Brüggeney1, Liisa D van Vliet1, Carla Mulas2, Fabrice Gielen1, Chibeza C Agley2, José C R Silva2, Austin Smith1,2, Kevin Chalut2,3, Florian Hollfelder1.
Abstract
Developmental cell biology requires technologies in which the fate of single cells is followed over extended time periods, to monitor and understand the processes of self-renewal, differentiation, and reprogramming. A workflow is presented, in which single cells are encapsulated into droplets (Ø: 80 µm, volume: ≈270 pL) and the droplet compartment is later converted to a hydrogel bead. After on-chip de-emulsification by electrocoalescence, these 3D scaffolds are subsequently arrayed on a chip for long-term perfusion culture to facilitate continuous cell imaging over 68 h. Here, the response of murine embryonic stem cells to different growth media, 2i and N2B27, is studied, showing that the exit from pluripotency can be monitored by fluorescence time-lapse microscopy, by immunostaining and by reverse-transcription and quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR). The defined 3D environment emulates the natural context of cell growth (e.g., in tissue) and enables the study of cell development in various matrices. The large scale of cell cultivation (in 2000 beads in parallel) may reveal infrequent events that remain undetected in lower throughput or ensemble studies. This platform will help to gain qualitative and quantitative mechanistic insight into the role of external factors on cell behavior.Entities:
Keywords: hydrogels; microdroplets; pluripotency; single cell analysis; stem cells
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30570812 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201804576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281