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Microfluidic device to study flow-free chemotaxis of swimming cells
Author(s) -
Nicolas GarciaSeyda,
Laurène Aoun,
Victoria Tishkova,
Valentine Seveau de Noray,
Martine BiarnesPelicot,
Marc Bajénoff,
MariePierre Valignat,
Olivier Théodoly
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
lab on a chip
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.064
H-Index - 210
eISSN - 1473-0197
pISSN - 1473-0189
DOI - 10.1039/d0lc00045k
Subject(s) - chemotaxis , microfluidics , flow (mathematics) , free flow , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , chemistry , nanotechnology , mechanics , materials science , biochemistry , physics , receptor
Microfluidic devices have been used in the last two decades to study in vitro cell chemotaxis, but few existing devices generate gradients in flow-free conditions. Flow can bias cell directionality of adherent cells and precludes the study of swimming cells like naïve T lymphocytes, which only migrate in a non-adherent fashion. We developed two devices that create stable, flow-free, diffusion-based gradients and are adapted for adherent and swimming cells. The flow-free environment is achieved by using agarose gel barriers between a central channel with cells and side channels with chemoattractants. These barriers insulate cells from injection/rinsing cycles of chemoattractants, they dampen residual drift across the device, and they allow co-culture of cells without physical interaction, to study contactless paracrine communication. Our devices were used here to investigate neutrophil and naïve T lymphocyte chemotaxis.

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