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Soilman A. Alhudaithy, PhD

Assistant Professor

Assistant professor

كلية العلوم الطبية التطبيقية
Building 24, 2nd floor, office 2252
publication
Journal Article
2022

Biocompatible micro tweezers for 3D hydrogel organoid array mechanical characterization

This study presents novel biocompatible Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based micromechanical tweezers (μTweezers) capable of the stiffness characterization and manipulation of hydrogel-based organoids. The system showed great potential for complementing established mechanical characterization methods such as Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM), parallel plate compression (PPC), and nanoindentation, while significantly reducing the volume of valuable hydrogels used for testing. We achieved a volume reduction of ~0.22 μl/sample using the μTweezers vs. ~157 μl/sample using the PPC, while targeting high-throughput measurement of widely adopted micro-mesoscale (a few hundred μm-1500 μm) 3D cell cultures. The μTweezers applied and measured nano-millinewton forces through cantilever’ deflection with high linearity and tunability for different applications; the assembly is compatible with typical inverted optical microscopes and fit on standard tissue culture Petri dishes, allowing mechanical compression characterization of arrayed 3D hydrogel-based organoids in a high throughput manner. The average achievable output per group was 40 tests per hour, where 20 organoids and 20 reference images in one 35 mm petri dish were tested, illustrating efficient productivity to match the increasing demand on 3D organoids’ applications. The changes in stiffness of collagen I hydrogel organoids in four conditions were measured, with ovarian cancer cells (SKOV3) or without (control). The Young’s modulus of the control group (Control—day 0, E = 407± 146, n = 4) measured by PPC was used as a reference modulus, where the relative elastic compressive modulus of the other groups based on the stiffness measurements was also calculated (control-day 0, E = 407 Pa), (SKOV3-day 0, E = 318 Pa), (control-day 5, E = 528 Pa), and (SKOV3-day 5, E = 376 Pa). The SKOV3-embedded hydrogel-based organoids had more shrinkage and lowered moduli on day 0 and day 5 than controls, consistently, while SKOV3 embedded organoids increased in stiffness in a similar trend to the collagen I control from day 0 to day 5. The proposed method can contribute to the biomedical, biochemical, and regenerative engineering fields, where bulk mechanical characterization is of interest. The μTweezers will also provide attractive design and application concepts to soft membrane-micro 3D robotics, sensors, and actuators.

Publication Work Type
Research Article based on invention/patent
Publisher Name
PLOS ONE
Publishing City
San Francisco, California
Volume Number
17
Issue Number
1
Patent Number
(3/221,969)
Sponsoring Organization
This research was funded by the National Science Foundation (#1809047, #1942518) and the Research and Development (R&D) Program (Research Pooling Initiative), Ministry of Education, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, (RPI-KSU).
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