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Valve-based microfluidic compression platform: single axon injury and regrowth

Authors :
Rezina Siddique
Labchan Rajbhandari
Suneil Hosmane
Rika M. Wright
Arun Venkatesan
In Hong Yang
Adam Fournier
K.T. Ramesh
Nitish V. Thakor
Source :
Lab on a Chip. 11:3888
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2011.

Abstract

We describe a novel valve-based microfluidic axon injury micro-compression (AIM) platform that enables focal and graded compression of micron-scale segments of single central nervous system (CNS) axons. The device utilizes independently controlled "push-down" injury pads that descend upon pressure application and contact underlying axonal processes. Regulated compressed gas is input into the AIM system and pressure levels are modulated to specify the level of injury. Finite element modeling (FEM) is used to quantitatively characterize device performance and parameterize the extent of axonal injury by estimating the forces applied between the injury pad and glass substrate. In doing so, injuries are normalized across experiments to overcome small variations in device geometry. The AIM platform permits, for the first time, observation of axon deformation prior to, during, and immediately after focal mechanical injury. Single axons acutely compressed (~5 s) under varying compressive loads (0-250 kPa) were observed through phase time-lapse microscopy for up to 12 h post injury. Under mild injury conditions (55 kPa) ~73% of axons continued to grow, while at moderate (55-95 kPa) levels of injury, the number of growing axons dramatically reduced to 8%. At severe levels of injury (95 kPa), virtually all axons were instantaneously transected and nearly half (~46%) of these axons were able to regrow within the imaging period in the absence of exogenous stimulating factors.

Details

ISSN :
14730189 and 14730197
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lab on a Chip
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d71a7e5c658d94d980cbc9d5f581d4e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c1lc20549h