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Microfluidics Dave Eddington Assistant Professor Department of Bioengineering July 10, 2008

Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

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Page 1: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Microfluidics

Dave EddingtonAssistant Professor

Department of Bioengineering

July 10, 2008

Page 2: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Outline• Background of BioMEMS

– Microfluidics– Micropatterning– microstructures

• Background of soft lithography• Example projects

– Sickle cell device– Hypoxia– Brain slice device– Cnidocysts

Page 3: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Microtechnology• Photolithography

– Microelectronics• Deposit metals• Diffuse dopants

• Micromachining– Microelectromechanical Systems

• Deposit structural material• Bulk Etch• DLP, Accellerometer

• Soft Lithography– BioMEMS

• Mold PDMS– Microfluidics– Micropatterning– Micromolding

BioMEMS

MEMS

microelectronics

Page 4: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

BioMEMS: Micropatterning• Use PDMS network to define surface chemistries

– Advesive– Non-Adhesive

• Control over cells/surfaces• Control cell-matrix interactions• Control cell-cell interactions• Control cell shape

McBaeth et al, Developmental Cell, 05

Page 5: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

BioMEMS: Microstructures

• Use PDMS to measure cellular forces• Use PDMS stamp to create wells in gels

Nelson et al, Science, 2006Tan et al, PNAS, 2003

Page 6: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

BioMEMS: Microfluidics

• Integrate multiple tasks onto single device• Short diffusion lengths• Laminar flow• Large surface to volume ratio• Similar length-scale as cells• Very small volumes

Lee et al, Science, 05

Page 7: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Why we like microfluidics?

• Leveraging the Microscale– Rapid diffusion– Large surface to volume ratio– Process integration– Microscale systems for microscale needs

Page 8: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Lithography• From Greek, meaning “writing in stone”• A method of patterning a layer of photosensitive material

based on radiation-induced structural degradation• Photosensitive material

– Material that experiences a change in its physical properties when exposed to a radiation source

– Photoresist– Depending on chemical nature, produce either a

positive or a negative image

Page 9: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Lithography

Page 10: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Lithography

SiPR

SiPR

SiSi

“+” “—”

Page 11: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4

and Sangeeta N. Bhatia1,5

1Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Harvard-MIT, 2School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University,

3Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 4Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School,

5Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, MIT,*Current Address: Department of Bioengineering, University of Illinois at Chicago

Microfluidic Model of a Sickle Cell CrisisMicrofluidic Model of a Sickle Cell Crisis

Page 12: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

What is sickle cell disease?

• The molecular defect was identified over 60 years ago• A single nucleotide change leads to an amino acid

substitution• Sickle hemoglobin molecules polymerize when

deoxygenated• The polymers form long fibers and distort the red blood cell

membrane and “sickle” the cell• Life expectancy = 45 years with one hospitalization/year

http://fig.cox.miami.edu/~cmallery/150/chemistry/hemoglobin.jpghttp://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/S/SickleMutation.gif

Page 13: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Vaso-occlusion is a MultiscaleProcess

• Multiscale processes (length & time)– 0.1s,10 nm: polymerization of hemoglobin S– 0.1s, 10 μm: cell sickling– 1000s, 100-μm: vessel jamming

Page 14: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

In Vitro Model

• Map out phase space – f(O2, Q, x)– Each occlusion = point

1

2

3

4

5

Page 15: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Experimental Setup

Page 16: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Oxygen Drop

0 20 40 60 80 100 120−2

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Time (s)

[O2] (

%)

Page 17: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Movies

• Video on method• 7 μm channels• In a 250 μm channel

Page 18: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Occlusion and Relaxation

0 100 200 300 400 500 6000

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

Time (s)

Vel

ocity

(no

rmal

ized

to in

itial

)

Occlusionτ = 124 sRelaxationτ = 22 s

0

10

[O2] (

%)

Time (s)

Page 19: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Controls

0 100 200 300 400 500 6000

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

Time (s)

Vel

ocity

(no

rmal

ized

to in

itial

)

Normal (0% HbS)Heterozygous (33% HbS)

Page 20: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Phase Space of Occlusion

Page 21: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Medical Intervention Validation

0 200 400 600 800 10000

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

Time (s)

Vel

ocity

(no

rmal

ized

to in

itial

)

Untreated (HbS = 78%)τ = −90 sTreated (HbS = 31%)τ = −404 s

0

10

[O2] (

%)

Time (s)

Page 22: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Preventing Occlusion

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 4000

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

Time (s)

Vel

ocity

(no

rmal

ized

to in

itial

)

0% O

2; 0% CO

τ = −35 s0% O

2; 0% CO

τ = −31 s0% O

2; 0% CO

τ = −35 s0% O

2; 0.01% CO

τ = −358 s0% O

2; 0.01% CO

τ = −95 s

0

0.01

[CO

] (%

)

0 0

10

[O2] (

%)

Time (s)

Page 23: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Microfluidic Sickle Cell Model

• It is possible to evoke, control and inhibit vaso-occlusion in a minimal microfluidic model

• Oxygen-dependant sickle hemoglobin polymerization and melting are enough to recreate vaso-occlusion

• Clinical interventions can be validated• Test bed for new therapeutics

– Generalizable to other hematological diseases

Page 24: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Characterizing MultiCharacterizing Multi--Modal Tissue Function in a Modal Tissue Function in a Microfluidic DeviceMicrofluidic Device

Javeed Shaikh Mohammed, Wang Yong, Tricia Harvat, Jose Oberholzer,

David Eddington

Page 25: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Islet Quantification: Pre Implantation

• Islet characterization: viability, purity, and sterility

• Transplant η ↔ Islet function • Our goal: high-throughput

platform for use in islet isolation arena

http://transplant.hospital.uic.edu/transplant/islets.html

Function = ?

• Specific aims: – Simple microfluidic device for perfusion and

imaging– Evaluate islet functionality

Page 26: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Cross-sectional view of device

Page 27: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Mouse Islets: Dynamic Perfusion

C57B6 mice islets (25 per perfusion chamber)

Page 28: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Balb/c mice (25 per perfusion chamber), Fura-2: 5 μM

Multimodal Function AnalysisMouse Islets: Ca2+ imaging & insulin

ELISA

Page 29: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Human islets (100 per perfusion chamber) [n=6]

Human Islets: Dynamic Perfusion

Page 30: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Human islets (100 per perfusion chamber), Fura-2: 5 μM

Multimodal Function AnalysisMouse Islets: Ca2+ imaging &

insulin ELISA

Page 31: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Human Islets Transplanted to Mice (Gold Standard to Quantify Islet

Function)

Non potent islets

Potent islets

1000 human islets transplanted into nude mice

Page 32: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Evaluating Human Islets: Highly Variable

Batch # KRB2 14 mM KRB2 KCl KRB2 KRB2 14 mM KRB2 KCl KRB2H249 0.13 1.80 0.42 1.56 0.14 2.26 82.40 5.28 140.60 29.03H251 0.21 0.65 0.12 1.43 0.08 0.05 40.56 2.54 154.50 2.31H256 0.00 0.17 0.03 0.51 0.05 0.71 89.40 9.41 210.00 0.10H259 0.01 0.35 0.11 0.82 0.27 0.88 375.50 58.06 263.20 3.33H261 0.01 0.16 0.05 0.20 0.03 1.43 125.00 2.18 94.36 7.61

AUC-FURA2 AUC-Insulin ELISA

Batch # KRB2 8 mM KRB2 KRB2 12 mM KRB2 KRB2 16.7 mM KRB2H249 0.79 104.10 15.52 38.43 197.20 17.95 1.45 165.20 21.19H251 0.21 188.40 17.07 0.71 201.40 4.71 0.24 193.90 12.65H252 0.13 293.40 1.61 11.42 480.40 35.88 26.70 802.10 24.41H253 0.00 105.00 4.11 1.87 94.17 4.88 0.39 171.60 3.10H256 2.48 101.20 8.83 1.41 360.00 8.07 5.33 420.80 38.14H259 0.17 105.90 7.80 4.70 196.20 14.32 0.32 160.10 23.50

AUC-8 mM AUC-12 mM AUC-16.7 mM

Page 33: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

High Throughput High Throughput Oxygenation Oxygenation

Page 34: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Oxygen is a Key Metabolic Variable

• Current Tools: Hypoxic Chambers– Crude, inefficient, and

problematic• Cannot replicate

gradients of oxygen– found across all tissues in

every animal• Need a better too to study

– Development– Angiogenesis– Cancer– Hematopoiesis– Drug Toxicity

Page 35: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

System Design: Add-on for Standard Lab Materials

• Modular Platform– Multiwell format – Diffusion through

PDMS

Page 36: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Oxygen Quantification

Page 37: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Microfluidic Brain Slice DeviceMicrofluidic Brain Slice Device

Hugo Caicedo, Javeed S. Mohammed, Chris P. Fall, and David Eddington

Page 38: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Current Approaches for Delivery

• Bathe entire slice – Imprecise– Simple

• Micropipette picospritzer– Precise– Bulky– Separate controller for each pipette

Page 39: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Simple

• Moudular add on for a standard perfusion chamber

Page 40: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Precise

• Microfluidic Stimulation– Simultaneous stimulation of multiple regions

– High spatial and temporal precision

Hans-Ulrich Dodt, Nature Methods 2007

Page 41: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Device Fabrication

http://www.jove.com/index/Details.stp?ID=302

Page 42: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Fluid Delivery: Passive Pumping

• Steady flow without external pumps

Page 43: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Microfluidic Brain Slice Device Design

• Adapt to commonly used materials

Page 44: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Fluorescence Quantification

• “Paint” neuromodulators

Page 45: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Fluorescence Quantification

• Deliver a bolus

Page 46: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Compatible with electrophysiology

Page 47: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

3D Modeling

Page 48: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Nematocysts as Part of Drug Nematocysts as Part of Drug Delivery PlatformDelivery Platform

Shawn C. Oppegard, Peter Anderson*, and David Eddington

*University of Florida, Whitney lab for Marine Biology

Page 49: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Overview• Cnidarian biology• Aim of project

– Bioleverage nematocysts• Preliminary results

– Material puncture tests– Lectin binding– Optical Tweezing

• Future directions– Nematocyst patterning

and immobilization

Page 50: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Nematocysts biology• Nematocysts are the venom

delivery system in cnidariananimals

– Phylum cnidaria includes the jellyfish

– Nematocysts are specialized organelles contained within cnidocytes

• Prey contact induces discharge of functional stinger

• Discharge is one of the fastest movements in animal kingdom

– Penetrates hard fish scales– Occurs in less than a microsecond– 5x106 g acceleration– 7 GPa pressure at thread tip

@

http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov

http://www.reefland.com

http://www.beachhunter.net

Page 51: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Nematocyst discharge in an ex vivotentacle

Page 52: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Nematocysts as Part of a Drug-Delivery Platform

• Ultimate Goal:– Bioleverage nematocysts– Microfabricate containment

wells for nematocysts

• Nematocysts attractive as miniature hypodermic needles– Efficient– Very stable– Can be triggered chemically or

electrically– Very small thread diameter

• Aim is to genetically re-engineer– Dr. Peter Anderson at the

Whitney Marine Biology Lab-University of Florida

DischargeStimulation

Nematocyst

Drug-Delivery“Patch”

Incorporation

Page 53: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Isolated nematocyst discharge studies

• Dry in 25 mM EDTA and then rehydrate in water– EDTA chelates calcium– Discharge is a calcium-dependent process

• Problem: Reorientation of cysts after firing when not anchored– Do not puncture most test materials

Rehydration

Page 54: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Tentacle-contained nematocyst discharge studies

• Best case scenario– Immobilized– Physiological discharge due

to mechanical stimulation of cnidocil

• Tentacles from 3 different animals tested– Chrysaora

• Initial trials– Cladonema

• Stenotele nematocysts– Physalia

• Very long threads (~1 mm vs. ~15 µm capsule diameter)

www.palaeos.org

www.paleobio.org

www.ocean-life.info

Chrysaora

Cladonema

Physalia

5 cm

10cm

Szczepanek, J. Cell Science, 2001www.palaeos.org

Stenotele

Page 55: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Puncture Mechanics Assessment

• Need to assess the puncture mechanics of the thread– Trigger discharge of nematocysts into adjacent material

• Tested materials with gamut of elastic moduli (Eskin=75 kPa)

– Gelatin ~ 20 kPa– Polyacrylamide ~ 60 kPa– Teflon ~ 0.1 MPa– Latex ~ 0.8 MPa– Polydimethyl siloxane (aka silicone, PDMS) ~ 1 MPa Starting Point– Nitrile ~ 2.6 MPa– PVC (Saran wrap) ~ 250 MPa– Polycarbonate ~ 2 GPa– Aluminum foil ~ 70 GPa– Glass ~ 90 GPa

• Elastic modulus as the material characteristic– Not measuring actual puncture stress– E is order of magnitude approximation

Soft

Hard

Page 56: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Physalia: Puncture tests• Went to Florida

– Physalia cultured at Whitney marine biology lab

• Method– Excised tentacles– Nematocysts discharge in

response to:• EGTA solution• Mechanical stimulation

– Tweezer prodding

• Note: A similar protocol was followed for Chrysaora at UIC

Page 57: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Physalia and Chrysaora: Puncture tests (cont.)

• Started with PDMS microchannels because easiest– Clear visualization of cross-sectional penetration– Tentacle pulled inside– Stimulated discharge with EGTA– Observe penetration with dissecting and compound scope

• Used films for all other materials– Place test material films on top of Physalia tentacle– Stimulate discharge with tweezers– Observe penetration with dissecting scope

600 microns

200 microns

Page 58: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Physalia nematocysts elastic modulus puncture threshold is ~1

MPa– Gelatin ~ 20 kPa– Polyacrylamide ~ 60 kPa– Teflon ~ 0.1 MPa– Latex ~ 0.8 MPa– PDMS ~ 1 MPa

----------THRESHOLD-----------– Nitrile ~ 2.6 MPa– PVC ~ 250 MPa– Polycarbonate ~ 2 GPa– Aluminum foil ~ 70 GPa– Glass ~ 90 GPa

Penetration

NoPenetration

Soft

Hard

•Chrysaora could not puncture PDMS

•Should use Physalia for patch

Page 59: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Future Work: Lectin binding as means of nematocyst

immobilization• Isolated nematocysts to be used, not

tentacles– Need to immobilize and possibly orient

• Lectins– Sugar-binding proteins– Sugar moeities present on surface of

nematocysts• Fluorophore-conjugated lectin binding to

nematocyst:– Lectins bind to apical surface of

nematocysts in Cladonema and Physalia• Could bind nematocysts to PDMS

membrane

• Explore other, basal-localized receptors to Physalia

Page 60: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Summary• BioMEMS is an enabling technology• Simple device design streamlines dissemination

– Device complexity limits practicality• We have lots of exciting projects

– Enabling projects• Microfluidic sickle cell model • Islet quantification• Brain slices• High throughput hypoxia

– Bioleveraged• Cnidocyst drug delivery

Page 61: Eddington RET 2008vienna.bioengr.uic.edu/RET/Activities/Technical Talks... · 2008. 7. 15. · David T. Eddington1*, John M. Higgins2,3, Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan2,4 and Sangeeta

Acknowledgements• BML lab

– Javeed Mohammed– Hugo Caicedo– Kihwan Nam– Shawn Oppegard

• Collaborators– Jose Oberholzer (UIC)- islets– Yong Wang (UIC) - islets– Chris Fall (UIC) – brain slice– Peter Anderson (UF) – jellyfish

• HST (sickle cell)– Sangeeta Bhatia– John Higgins– Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan

• Funding– NIH - NRSA– DARPA – Alfred P. Sloan Foundation