Vibration enhanced cell growth induced by surface acoustic waves as in vitro wound-healing model
Author(s) -
Manuel S. Brugger,
Kathrin Baumgartner,
Sophie C. F. Mauritz,
Stefan C. Gerlach,
Florian Röder,
Christine Schlosser,
Regina Fluhrer,
A. Wixforth,
Christoph Westerhausen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.2005203117
Subject(s) - intracellular , materials science , ultrasonic sensor , cell growth , wound healing , stimulation , acoustic wave , deflection (physics) , therapeutic ultrasound , cell migration , ultrasound , cell , biomedical engineering , biophysics , acoustics , chemistry , optics , microbiology and biotechnology , neuroscience , medicine , biology , physics , biochemistry , immunology
We report on in vitro wound-healing and cell-growth studies under the influence of radio-frequency (rf) cell stimuli. These stimuli are supplied either by piezoactive surface acoustic waves (SAWs) or by microelectrode-generated electric fields, both at frequencies around 100 MHz. Employing live-cell imaging, we studied the time- and power-dependent healing of artificial wounds on a piezoelectric chip for different cell lines. If the cell stimulation is mediated by piezomechanical SAWs, we observe a pronounced, significant maximum of the cell-growth rate at a specific SAW amplitude, resulting in an increase of the wound-healing speed of up to 135 ± 85% as compared to an internal reference. In contrast, cells being stimulated only by electrical fields of the same magnitude as the ones exposed to SAWs exhibit no significant effect. In this study, we investigate this effect for different wavelengths, amplitude modulation of the applied electrical rf signal, and different wave modes. Furthermore, to obtain insight into the biological response to the stimulus, we also determined both the cell-proliferation rate and the cellular stress levels. While the proliferation rate is significantly increased for a wide power range, cell stress remains low and within the normal range. Our findings demonstrate that SAW-based vibrational cell stimulation bears the potential for an alternative method to conventional ultrasound treatment, overcoming some of its limitations.
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