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A miniaturized chip for 3D optical imaging of tissue regeneration in vivo

Authors :
Claudio Conci
Emanuela Jacchetti
Laura Sironi
Lorenzo Gentili
Giulio Cerullo
Rebeca Martínez Vázquez
Roberto Osellame
Mario Marini
Margaux Bouzin
Maddalena Collini
Laura D'Alfonso
Elmina Kabouraki
Maria Farsari
Anthi Ranella
Nikos Kehagias
Giuseppe Chirico
Manuela Teresa Raimondi
Popp, J
Gergely, C
Conci, C
Jacchetti, E
Sironi, L
Gentili, L
Cerullo, G
Martinez, R
Osellame, R
Marini, M
Bouzin, M
Collini, M
D'Alfonso, L
Kabouraki, E
Farsari, M
Ranella, A
Kehagias, N
Chirico, G
Raimondi, M
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SPIE, 2022.

Abstract

The current protocols for biocompatibility assessment of biomaterials, based on histopathology, require the sacrifice of a huge number of laboratory animals with an unsustainable ethical burden and remarkable cost. Intravital microscopy techniques can be used to study implantation outcomes in real time though with limited capabilities of quantification in longitudinal studies, mainly restricted by the light penetration and the spatial resolution in deep tissues. We present the outline and first tests of a novel chip which aims to enable longitudinal studies of the reaction to the biomaterial implant. The chip is composed of a regular reference microstructure fabricated via two-photon polymerization in the SZ2080 resist. The geometrical design and the planar raster spacing largely determine the mechanical and spectroscopic features of the microstructures. The development, in-vitro characterization and in vivo validation of the Microatlas is performed in living chicken embryos by fluorescence microscopy 3 and 4 days after the implant; the quantification of cell infiltration inside the Microatlas demonstrates its potential as novel scaffold for tissue regeneration.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb77abf1e418cff3021042016f4867fa