4.7 Article

Microfluidics study of intracellular calcium response to mechanical stimulation on single suspension cells

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages 1060-1069

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3lc40880a

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Funding

  1. General Research Fund of the Hong Kong [CityU-104411]
  2. National Basic Research Program of China [2012CB933302]
  3. Shenzhen Key Laboratory Funding Scheme of Shenzhen Municipal Government.

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A microfluidic microdevice was developed to exert mechanical stimulation on an individual suspension cell for mechanosensation research. In this microfluidic chip, an individual cell was isolated from a population of cells, and trapped in a microchannel with a compressive component made of a deflectable membrane. The mechanosensation of HL60 cells ( leukemic cells) was studied using this chip, and the results showed that mechanical stimulations could trigger extracellular calcium to flow into HL60 cells through ion channels on cell membranes. The tension on individual HL60 cells exerted by the microdevice was showed large variations in the threshold of mechanosensation activation. In contrast to previous reports using patch clamp technique, there was little influence of cytoskeleton interruption on HL60 cell mechanosensation triggered by whole-cell compression. Additionally, two functional units were integrated in one chip for carrying out mechanosensation study in parallel, where HL60 cells ( leukemic cells) and Jurkat cells ( lymphocytes) were shown to respond to mechanical stimulation with different kinetics. The results demonstrated that the microfluidic device provides a novel approach to investigating the mechanosensation of single suspension cells in high-throughput.

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