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Soilman A. Alhudaithy, PhD

Assistant Professor

Assistant professor

كلية العلوم الطبية التطبيقية
Building 24, 2nd floor, office 2252

Design, Fabrication, and Validation of a Petri Dish-Compatible PDMS Bioreactor for the Tensile Stimulation and Characterization of Microtissues

In this paper, we report on a novel biocompatible micromechanical bioreactor (actuator and sensor) designed for the in situ manipulation and characterization of live microtissues. The purpose of this study was to develop and validate an application-targeted sterile bioreactor that is accessible, inexpensive, adjustable, and easily fabricated. Our method relies on a simple polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) molding technique for fabrication and is compatible with commonly-used laboratory equipment and materials. Our unique design includes a flexible thin membrane that allows for the transfer of an external actuation into the PDMS beam-based actuator and sensor placed inside a conventional 35 mm cell culture Petri dish. Through computational analysis followed by experimental testing, we demonstrated its functionality, accuracy, sensitivity, and tunable operating range. Through time-course testing, the actuator delivered strains of over 20% to biodegradable electrospun poly (D, L-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) 85:15 non-aligned nanofibers (~91 µm thick). At the same time, the sensor was able to characterize time-course changes in Young’s modulus (down to 10–150 kPa), induced by an application of isopropyl alcohol (IPA). Furthermore, the actuator delivered strains of up to 4% to PDMS monolayers (~30 µm thick), simultaneously characterizing their elastic modulus up to ~2.2 MPa. The platform repeatedly applied dynamic (0.23 Hz) tensile stimuli to live Human Dermal Fibroblast (HDF) cells for 12 hours (h) and recorded the cellular reorientation towards two angle regimes, with averages of −58.85° and +56.02°. The device biocompatibility with live cells was demonstrated for one week, with no signs of cytotoxicity. We can conclude that our PDMS bioreactor is advantageous for low-cost tissue/cell culture micromanipulation studies involving mechanical actuation and characterization. Our device eliminates the need for an expensive experimental setup for cell micromanipulation, increasing the ease of live-cell manipulation studies by providing an affordable way of conducting high-throughput experiments without the need to open the Petri dish, reducing manual handling, cross-contamination, supplies, and costs. The device design, material, and methods allow the user to define the operational range based on their targeted samples/application.

Publication Work Type
Research Article
Publisher Name
MDPI Micromachines, Special Issue: Microscale Robotics for Cellular and Tissue Engineering
Publishing City
Basel, Switzerland
Volume Number
11
Issue Number
10
Sponsoring Organization
National Science Foundation (CCSS1809047 and CAREER1942518)
more of publication
publications

This study presents novel biocompatible Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based micromechanical tweezers (μTweezers) capable of the stiffness characterization and manipulation of hydrogel-based…

by Alhudaithy, Soliman, Hoshino, Kazunori
2022
Published in:
PLOS ONE
publications

Whole slide imaging (WSI) systems convert the conventional biological samples into digital images. Existing commercial WSI systems usually require an expensive high-performance motorized stage to…

by Guo, Chengfei, Bian, Zichao, Alhudaithy, Soliman, Jiang, Shaowei, Tomizawa, Yuji, Song, Pengming, Wang, Tianbo, Shao, Xiaopeng
2021
Published in:
Biomedical Optics EXPRESS
publications

In this paper, we report on a novel biocompatible micromechanical bioreactor (actuator and sensor) designed for the in situ manipulation and characterization of live microtissues. The purpose of…

by Alhudaithy, Soliman, Abdulmalik, Sama, Kumbar, Sangamesh G., Hoshino, Kazunori
2020
Published in:
MDPI Micromachines, Special Issue: Microscale Robotics for Cellular and Tissue Engineering