Journal Article10.12794/metadc2178818
Engineering a Microfluidic Blood-Brain Barrier on a Silicon Chip
Jiafeng Liu
TL;DR: An organ chip model that incorporates mechanical stretching, microfluidic techniques, electrospun fibers, and hydrogel extracellular matrix demonstrates that this chip significantly improved the tightness of microvascular selective transport ability and has the potential to be used in drug sorting for central nervous system (CNS) diseases.
read more
Abstract: The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is composed of brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs), pericytes, and astrocytic endfeet, which regulate the transport of molecules into and out of the brain. BMECs possess intrinsic barrier properties that limit the passage of approximately 98% of small molecules into the brain in healthy individuals. However, in some brain diseases, the BBB undergoes structural and functional alterations, which can contribute to disease progression. In this study, we aimed to investigate the BBB by exploring the effects of endothelial cell stretching and the optimal dimensionality of stretching to enhance endothelium barrier tightness in Chapter 2. Subsequently, we developed an endothelium gradient stretching device to further examine the stretching effect in Chapter 3. Additionally, we investigated the promotion of endothelium tightness through the use of electrospun fibers, wherein we controlled the pore size. Based on these findings, we designed and fabricated an organ chip model that incorporates mechanical stretching, microfluidic techniques, electrospun fibers, and hydrogel extracellular matrix (ECM). The results of permeability testing demonstrated that this chip significantly improved the tightness of microvascular selective transport ability and has the potential to be used in drug sorting for central nervous system (CNS) diseases.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
References
Tissue chips - innovative tools for drug development and disease modeling.
Lucie A. Low,Danilo A. Tagle +1 more
TL;DR: The wide-ranging and promising future of tissue chips is discussed, providing new tools for the understanding of disease mechanisms and pathologies, and assessing effectiveness of new therapies.
Emerging Roles of Pericytes in the Regulation of the Neurovascular Unit in Health and Disease
TL;DR: The uncovering of the regulatory role of pericytes on the BBB will provide key insight into how barrier integrity can be re-established during neuroinflammation.
The effect of micronscale anisotropic cross patterns on fibroblast migration
Hojeong Jeon,Hirofumi Hidai,Hirofumi Hidai,David J. Hwang,Kevin E. Healy,Costas P. Grigoropoulos +5 more
TL;DR: Overall, cell morphology and motility was influenced by the aspect ratio of the cross pattern, the grid size, and the height of ridges, which was dependent on the patterned surface topography.
116
Long Term Culture of the A549 Cancer Cell Line Promotes Multilamellar Body Formation and Differentiation towards an Alveolar Type II Pneumocyte Phenotype.
James Ross Cooper,James Ross Cooper,Muhammad Bilal Abdullatif,Edward C. Burnett,Karen E. Kempsell,Franco Conforti,Howard Tolley,Jane E. Collins,Donna E. Davies,Donna E. Davies +9 more
TL;DR: This work defines a set of conditions for promoting ATII differentiation characteristics in A549 cells that may be advantageous for studies with this cell line.
Healing characteristics of electrospun polyurethane grafts with various porosities.
Helga Bergmeister,Catharina Schreiber,Christian Grasl,Ingrid Walter,Roberto Plasenzotti,Martin Stoiber,David Bernhard,Heinrich Schima +7 more
TL;DR: These conduits show successful natural host vessel reconstitution without limitation of biomechanical properties and increased porosity improves host cell ingrowth and survival in electrospun conduits.
112