| Literature DB >> 35626736 |
Tania Limongi1, Francesco Guzzi2, Elvira Parrotta3, Patrizio Candeloro2, Stefania Scalise4, Valeria Lucchino4, Francesco Gentile2, Luca Tirinato2, Maria Laura Coluccio2, Bruno Torre1, Marco Allione1, Monica Marini1, Francesca Susa1, Enzo Di Fabrizio1, Giovanni Cuda4, Gerardo Perozziello2.
Abstract
The necessity to improve in vitro cell screening assays is becoming ever more important. Pharmaceutical companies, research laboratories and hospitals require technologies that help to speed up conventional screening and therapeutic procedures to produce more data in a short time in a realistic and reliable manner. The design of new solutions for test biomaterials and active molecules is one of the urgent problems of preclinical screening and the limited correlation between in vitro and in vivo data remains one of the major issues. The establishment of the most suitable in vitro model provides reduction in times, costs and, last but not least, in the number of animal experiments as recommended by the 3Rs (replace, reduce, refine) ethical guiding principles for testing involving animals. Although two-dimensional (2D) traditional cell screening assays are generally cheap and practical to manage, they have strong limitations, as cells, within the transition from the three-dimensional (3D) in vivo to the 2D in vitro growth conditions, do not properly mimic the real morphologies and physiology of their native tissues. In the study of human pathologies, especially, animal experiments provide data closer to what happens in the target organ or apparatus, but they imply slow and costly procedures and they generally do not fully accomplish the 3Rs recommendations, i.e., the amount of laboratory animals and the stress that they undergo must be minimized. Microfluidic devices seem to offer different advantages in relation to the mentioned issues. This review aims to describe the critical issues connected with the conventional cells culture and screening procedures, showing what happens in the in vivo physiological micro and nano environment also from a physical point of view. During the discussion, some microfluidic tools and their components are described to explain how these devices can circumvent the actual limitations described in the introduction.Entities:
Keywords: 3D cell cultures; 3Rs principles; in vitro cell cultures; lab on chip; microfluidics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35626736 PMCID: PMC9139493 DOI: 10.3390/cells11101699
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1The scheme represents an arterial capillary (in red) connected to a venous capillary (in blue) and surrounded by a generic tissue constituted by cells. The arrows show the movement of fluids around the capillary, due to filtration (in the arterial side) and reabsorption (in the venous side).
Figure 23D PVA scaffolds in which stem cells are grown [50]. (a) macroscopic view of the 3D wet scaffold at room temperature; (b) scanning electron microscope cross sectional details of the 3D structure; (c) fluorescence microscopy image of DAPI stained cell homogeneously distributed on a Matrigel coated PVA scaffold.
Summary of a selection of the most representative and recent 3D microfluidic cell culture applications.
| Microfluidic Platform Type | Application | Cell Lines | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Resin 3D-printed system | Cell Culture, LC-MS/MS single cell analysis | BPAECs (Bovine Pulmonary Artery Endothelial Cells), MDCK (Madin-Darby Canine Kidney) | [ |
| Microwell-based PDMS-membrane-PDMS sandwich multilayer chips | Spheroid formation, OoC | C3A (liver) | [ |
| Two-stage temperature-controlling system used to generate decellularized extracellular matrix (dECM) hydrogel microspheres | dECM hydrogels microsphere formation, cell culture | Schwann cells (nervous tissue), PC12 (adrenal gland) | [ |
| Injection-molded | OoC, angiogenesis | HUVEC (Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells), fibroblasts | [ |
| PDMS-gut-on-a-chip device either with a straight channel or a non-linear convoluted channel, transwell-embedded hybrid chip | OoC | Caco-2 (colon) | [ |
| Cyclo-olefin-polymer (COP) | On-chip platelet production | imMKCLs (immortalized MegaKaryocyte progenitor Cell Lines) | [ |
| PDMS soft lithography replicas of superficial channels 3D-printed in different resins (Clear, Model, Tough, Amber, Dental resins) | OoC | HUVEC (Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells), fibroblasts | [ |
| PDMS bone-mimicking extracellular matrix composite device | Angiogenesis, OoC | SW620 (colon), MKN74 (stomach) | [ |
| Single-chamber commercial | OoC, disease model, drug screening | Primary human hepatocytes, EA.hy926 (human endothelial), U937 (pleural effusion), LX-2 (hepatic stellate cell) | [ |
| Collagen scaffold | OoC | Caco-2 (colon) | [ |
| Cellulose-based device | Chemotaxis, invasion assay | A549 (lung) | [ |
| Polymerized High Internal Phase Emulsion (polyHIPE) system | OoC | hES-MPs (human Embrionic Stem cell-derived Mesenchymal Progenitor cells) | [ |
| OrganoPlate LiverTox™ | Drug screening, OoC | Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived hepatocytes (iHep), endothelial cells, THP-1 monoblast (peripheral blood) | [ |
| Injection-molded | Drug screening | HeLa (uterus, cervix), NK-92 (peripheral blood) | [ |
| Resin 3D-printed system | Spheroid formation | OSCC (Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma), HepG2 (liver) | [ |
| 3D-printed device | Circulating Tumour Cells (CTCs) isolation | MCF-7 (breast), SW480 (colon), PC3 (prostate), 293T (kidney) | [ |
| PDMS-based device | Spheroid formation, disease model, drug screening, OoC | Rat primary hepatocytes, HSCs (Hepatic Stellate Cells) | [ |
| PDMS-glass chip and | Four OoC | EpiIntestinal™, HepaRG (liver), HHStec (Human primary Hepatic Stellate cells), RPTEC/TERT-1 (human proximal tubule) | [ |
| PDMS-based device | OoC | Hepatocytes from primary and iPS-derived cells | [ |
| Three-layered glass device | OoC, disease model, drug screening | Primary human hepatocytes, LSECs (Liver Sinusoidal Endothelial Cells), Kupffer cells (liver) | [ |
| Three-layered glass device | OoC, disease model, drug screening | Primary human hepatocytes, iPSC (induced-Pluripotent Stem Cells), endothelial cells, Kupffer cells (liver) | [ |
| Silicon scaffold fabricated by deep reactive ion etching | OoC, disease model, drug screening | PHH (Primary Human Hepatocyte), non-parenchymal cells | [ |
| PDMS “open-top” device | Angiogenesis, spheroid formation | HDMEC (Human Dermal Micro-vascular Endothelial Cells), Primary human lung fibroblasts, U87MG (nervous tissue) | [ |
| PDMS based device | Angiogenesis, OoC | hLFs (human Lung Fibroblasts), HUVECs (Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells) | [ |
| Two-layered glass-PDMS hybrid system | Spheroid formation, invasion assay, drug screening | U87 (nervous tissue) | [ |
| 3D-printed system | Angiogenesis, cell culture, drug screening | bEnd.3 (mouse brain endothelial cell line) | [ |
| Double-casting of PDMS, with master mold made of PMMA. | Spheroid formation, drug screening | Caco-2 (Colon), NHDF (Normal Human Dermal Fibroblast), HepG2 (liver), A549 (lung) | [ |
| 3D-hydrogel device | Drug screening, OoC | hCMEC/D3 (endothelial cell), HUVECs (Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells), primary neurons, astrocytes | [ |
| PDMS based device | OoC, drug screening | C3A (liver), EA.hy926 (endothelial) | [ |
| PMMA-PDMS hybrid system and bioprinted hydrogel scaffold | OoC, angiogenesis | HUVECs (Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells), neonatal rate cardiomyocytes | [ |
| PDMS based device | OoC, disease model, drug screening | hiPSCs (human induced Pluripotent Stem Cells), CMs (Cardiomyocytes) differentiated from hiPSCs | [ |
Figure 3Scheme reporting some of the main components which can constitute a microfluidic device.
Figure 4Passive microfluidic platform for cell culturing [92]. (a) isometric sketch of the microfluidic device; (b) zoom in of the sketch showing the physical principle to drive the liquids inside the device; (c,d) picture and picture’s details of the device showing how the different liquids diffuse in the culture chamber.
Figure 5Microfluidic device for chemotaxis studies. (a) isometric sketch of the microfluidic circuits showing the working principle of the device; (b,c) images of the device; (d) time lapse images of a chemotaxis experiment.