DOI:
10.1039/D1LC01160J
(Tutorial Review)
Lab Chip, 2022,
22, 1852-1875
Electrically-driven handling of gametes and embryos: taking a step towards the future of ARTs
Received
22nd December 2021
, Accepted 11th April 2022
First published on 2nd May 2022
Abstract
Electrical stimulation of gametes and embryos and on-chip manipulation of microdroplets of culture medium serve as promising tools for assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). Thus far, dielectrophoresis (DEP), electrorotation (ER) and electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) proved compatible with most laboratory procedures offered by ARTs. Positioning, entrapment and selection of reproductive cells can be achieved with DEP and ER, while EWOD provides the dynamic microenvironment of a developing embryo to better mimic the functions of the oviduct. Furthermore, these techniques are applicable for the assessment of the developmental competence of a mammalian embryo in vitro. Such research paves the way towards the amelioration and full automation of the assisted reproduction methods. This article aims to provide a summary on the recent developments regarding electrically stimulated lab-on-chip devices and their application for the manipulation of gametes and embryos in vitro.
Adriana Karcz | Adriana Karcz is a PhD candidate at CMST (Centre for Microsystems Technology), Imec and Ghent University, and Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at Ghent University, Belgium. She is working on the development of a digital microfluidic platform for the in vitro manipulation of mammalian embryos. The project involves active participation in two distinct fields of study, i.e., micro- and nanotechnology engineering and reproductive medicine. Her research focuses on the adaptation of standard bioprotocols for the on-chip manipulation of cells and biofluids with the use of electric fields. |
Ann Van Soom | Prof. Dr. Ann Van Soom holds a position as full professor at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ghent University, Belgium. She is investigating in vivo embryo-maternal and in vitro embryo and culture environment interactions in domestic animals. Additionally, she focuses on more applied research in cryopreservation of gametes and embryos, the identification of markers for embryo quality/pregnancy outcome in humans and the development of a microfluidic system in collaboration with the engineering department. She was elected as board member of the International Embryo Technology Society and a member of the EU-ITN network RepBiotech, and is now involved in EU-ITN network Eurova. |
Katrien Smits | Katrien Smits obtained her PhD in Veterinary Sciences from Ghent University in 2010. Presently, she is assigned as professor of equine assisted reproduction at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ghent University. Her research focusses on assisted reproduction and embryo–maternal interaction in horses and she specializes in cryopreservation (vitrification) and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) techniques. The fruits of her work are the birth of SMICSI, the first test tube foal born in Belgium, and VISCI, the first foal born from a vitrified, immature oocyte in the world. She runs a clinical lab, performing around 250 equine ICSI-cycles per year. |
Rik Verplancke | Dr. ir. Rik Verplancke obtained the academic degree of doctor of electrical engineering from the Electronics and Information Systems department, Ghent University (Belgium) in 2013. In his PhD, he developed a generic technology platform for the integration of microelectronics and microfluidics on stretchable substrates. Since 2013, he has worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the UGent/IMEC-CMST (Centre for Microsystems Technology) group. His research focuses on the development of new thin-film based technologies for hybrid, mechanically deformable/stretchable electronic systems and polymer-based microsystem technologies in general. |
Sandra Van Vlierberghe | Prof. Dr. Sandra Van Vlierberghe holds a guest professorship at Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) and a full professorship at Ghent University (Polymer Chemistry & Biomaterials Group, Belgium). She has acquired expertise related to the synthesis, the modification and the processing of (bio)polymers including thermoplasts (e.g. polyesters) and hydrogels (e.g. proteins and polysaccharides) for a variety of tissue engineering applications. She is experienced in the field of polymer processing using 3D printing, electrospinning and two-photon polymerization (2PP). In 2017, she received the Jean Leray award from the European Society for Biomaterials. |
Jan Vanfleteren | Prof. Dr. ir. Jan Vanfleteren obtained his PhD in electronic engineering from Ghent University, Belgium, in 1987. He is currently a Principal Member of Technical Staff at UGent-IMEC/CMST (Centre for Microsystems Technology) group and is involved in the development of novel interconnection, assembly and substrate technologies, especially in wearable electronics and polymer microsystem technologies. In 2004 Jan Vanfleteren was appointed as part time professor at Ghent University and since 2009 he has been a promoter of 20 successfully defended PhDs. He is (co)-author of more than 200 papers in international journals and conferences with a H-index of 30. |
Introduction
Infertility is a condition which affects couples around the world regardless of gender, race or nationality.1–3 The underlying causes of subfertility can be distinguished into male4–7 and female8–12 factors. Reduced fecundity can significantly affect our daily life and thus be considered as a marker of general health. Both infertile men and women are likely to have comorbidities (such as increased risk of different types of cancer and cardiovascular and metabolic diseases).13,14 Numerous studies have shown that subfertility causes psychological distress, depression, anxiety and may lead to the abuse of stimulants among women.14 There is no doubt that both men and women are more susceptible to develop mental health problems. However, psychological therapy proved to be an efficient tool to reduce these harmful effects of infertility on patients.15 Therefore, the reassurance of comprehensive fertility care is essential. “Assisted reproductive technologies” (ARTs) stand for a group of procedures developed to facilitate conception that would result in the birth of a healthy offspring, which would otherwise be difficult or impossible to achieve by natural intercourse. An ART cycle involves hormonal stimulation of ovaries, egg retrieval, in vitro maturation (IVM), in vitro fertilization (IVF) or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), in vitro embryo culture (IVC), embryo transfer (ET) and eventually cryopreservation of gametes and embryos. Additionally, ARTs may offer preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and preimplantation genetic screening (PGS) which allow for the assessment of the genetic disease potential of an early embryo before transfer. For more detailed definitions of the terms used, we kindly refer the reader to “The International Glossary on Infertility and Fertility Care, 2017”.16 The development of ARTs has a long history. Numerous studies contributed to the creation of current procedures which eventually led to the birth of the first healthy human child after a successful IVF.17,18 Since then, multiple efforts have been made to improve the conditions of in vitro production (IVP) of mammalian embryos. Most of them, however, were directed towards the optimization of the environment surrounding the embryo, such as the culture medium composition and the conditions kept inside the incubator.19 Despite the fruitfulness of these attempts, the developmental rates of IVP embryos are still suboptimal and species-specific. For instance, in mice20 and cows,21 the amount of embryos that reach the blastocyst stage upon standard IVC, is 80–90% and 20–40%, respectively. In pig IVP, 80% of oocytes fertilized by a single sperm can grow into blastocysts, however, the high incidence of polyspermic fertilization up to 70% significantly lowers the success rates of swine IVP.22 Until now, no protocol was proposed for horses due to the lack of success in equine IVF,23 but equine ICSI is possible.22 Introduction of proteins present in biofluids collected from the pig reproductive tract in swine embryo IVC24,25 and extracellular vesicles isolated from the bovine follicular and oviductal fluids in bovine IVC26 resulted in a higher percentage of blastocysts24,26 or avoidance of genetic aberrations.25 Thus, decreased rates of mammalian IVP can be related to the absence of the maternal genital tract and its functionality. Moreover, mammalian embryos communicate with each other and their surroundings when cultured in groups in vitro.27 These findings clearly highlight the importance of the early embryo microenvironment, both in vivo and in vitro.28,29In vivo, the mammalian oviductal epithelium consists of two types of cells, which determine its function. Ciliated cells (together with the smooth muscles of the uterine tube) are responsible for the transport of gametes and embryos, while secretory cells provide them with essential nutrients.30In vitro maturation reflects the time when the cumulus oocyte complex (COC) is released from the ovarian follicle and picked up by the fimbriae. In vitro fertilization attempts to reciprocate the situation occurring in the ampullary region of the oviduct, i.e. the co-incubation of gametes upon which a single sperm cell fuses with the ovum creating a zygote. In vitro culture corresponds with the period during which the embryo develops further while being moved along the isthmus towards the uterus, where it will eventually implant. The formulation of an early embryo consists of a cascade of events steered by the interactions between the gametes, the embryo and their surroundings.31 Therefore, the IVM, IVF and IVC protocols need to satisfy the requirements supporting the stimulation of gametes and subsequent cellular divisions and reprogramming of the resulting zygote until it transforms into a blastocyst and can be transferred into the womb. A schematic representation of the mammalian oviduct and its significance in the early embryonic development in vivo with related in vitro techniques are shown in Fig. 1.
|
| Fig. 1 Importance of the mammalian oviduct and in vitro methods in assisted reproduction: IVM, IVF, ICSI, IVC, and cryopreservation of gametes and embryos. Sections of the uterine tubes: infundibulum, ampulla and isthmus are shown. Green arrows: 1) cumulus–oocyte-complex (COC) is picked up by the fimbriae of the infundibulum and 2) transported to the ampulla. Red arrows: 1) spermatozoa is deposited into the uterus during coitus and (2–4) travels through the lumen of the oviduct to the ampullary region creating a sperm reservoir. There, a single sperm cell fuses with the COC and fertilization occurs. Black arrows: 1) a resulting zygote is moved towards the uterus undergoing subsequent cellular divisions, 2) from 1-cell to 2-cell, 3) 4-cell to morula, 5) until a blastocyst. Red cells surrounding the blastocoele (blastocyst cavity) represent the trophoblast which will contribute to the creation of placenta. Clustered pink cells depict the inner cell mass (embryoblast) which will differentiate into the structures that will further develop into a foetus. Thinning of zona pellucida (protective coat surrounding the oocyte and embryo, here: yellow) during early embryonic development is shown. | |
The success rates of human ARTs are fairly difficult to analyse due to the amount of contributing variables. IVF is a costly procedure with the price per cycle varying between countries.32 The accessibility and utilization of these procedures are related to cultural aspects, government regulations, religious beliefs and socioeconomic status.33–36 The global live birth rate calculated as the percentage of the total number of ART cycles using autologous oocytes (fresh and cryopreserved) based on the data collected in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Continental Europe, UK, Japan, Latin America and USA between the years 2004 and 2013 adds up to around 20.5%.37 A decline in live birth rates (after fresh IVF or ICSI cycle), however, was later observed and was related to more pronounced utilization of practices added in recent years, for example the elective single embryo transfer (eSET), and progressing industrialization and commoditization of ARTs.38 The optimization of single embryo culture conditions in vitro could improve the birth rates after single embryo transfer (SET) and decrease the number of embryos produced in vitro. This could result in the reduction of embryo cryopreservation and thereby increase the utilization by lowering the cost of one IVF cycle.39
Besides the above-mentioned issues, risks linked to ART treatments exist.40,41 Threats posed by multiple pregnancies to both the developing foetus(es) and the mother are known42,43 and some malformations have been linked to IVF treatments.44 Furthermore, children born after assisted reproductive procedures have distinct epigenetic profiles as compared to children conceived in a natural way.45,46 Changes in the epigenomes among various mammalian species are associated with the conditions of IVC.47 Providing a suitable in vitro microenvironment that would better recreate the in vivo surroundings of an embryo could possibly reduce these genetic alterations. Therefore, the necessity to revise ART protocols that are currently in place in accordance with the state-of-the-art technologies in human and animal IVF and IVP is apparent. Preservation of endangered species by ARTs and research disciplines that are using in vitro culture at some point, such as aquaculture, parasitology and microbiology, could benefit greatly from the use of (digital) microfluidic devices (with faster application and biochip validation).
Microfluidics
Microfluidics is gaining increasing interest in the field of mammalian reproduction. It refers to the study of the behaviour of fluids at a microscale where the predominant liquid-driving phenomena are related to the pressure gradients and capillary effects which arise within microchannel structures as well as the interactions occurring at the interface between two phases (liquid, solid, gas). Additionally, the fluids, as well as the particles suspended within, can be manipulated by the application of external stimuli in the form of electric and magnetic forces or acoustic waves.48 Microfluidic chips designed for use in ARTs are plentiful and have been subjected to a number of reviews in the past 5 years.49–61 Due to the high compatibility of sperm for its manipulation within microstructures, a plethora of such chips solely for the collection, handling and analysis of semen have been proposed and discussed.62–71 Examples of microfluidic chips developed for the in vitro processing of oocytes,72,73 sperm cells74,75 and the culture of embryos76 are presented in Fig. 2. Furthermore, processing of reactants for cryopreservation77 as well as isolation and characterization of biomarkers of embryo quality52 can be achieved using microchannels. Microfluidics was employed to study the embryo mechanics while hydrogel microchannels mimicking the stiffness of the oviduct's epithelium were used to provide a mechanical model for mouse embryo hatching out of the zona pellucida, which forms a protective coat surrounding the oocyte and embryo.78 Based on the mechanical properties of an early human zygote, a prediction of the oocyte's developmental competence can be made.79 Confinement of gametes and embryos within microchannels allows for more focus to be given to physical and mechanical stimuli in vitro to better mimic the in vivo situation.51 Culture medium droplets of reduced sizes yielded better results in blastocyst development of human embryos.80 Additionally, an IVP embryo is subjected to stress induced by various assisted reproductive procedures.81 It was shown that human and mouse early embryonic development is adversely affected by the gradients of metabolism products, such as ammonium, suggesting the need for its removal from the culture medium.82
|
| Fig. 2 (A) Microfluidic chamber for the in vitro maturation of bovine oocytes is shown. Black arrows indicate the “filter-like” capillaries created to trap the cumulus oocyte complexes (COCs). The device was fabricated with the cyclic olefin copolymer using hot embossing and micromilling techniques which can be performed in a rapid manner outside of the clean room environment. Reproduced from ref. 72 with permission from SAGE. (B) Jagged PDMS microstructure for the purpose of stripping of the cumulus cells surrounding the mouse oocyte. Denudation of the ovum is a step prior to the injection of a sperm cell during ICSI, usually achieved by exposing the COCs to hyaluronidase followed by pipetting, or vortexing. The microdevice can serve as an alternative to the manual process. Reproduced from ref. 73 with permission from Royal Society of Chemistry. (C) Microfluidic PDMS channel mounted on top of a surface acoustic wave (SAW) chip for sperm selection. The acoustic field is generated using interdigital transducers (IDTs) while the semen sample flows through the channel. Both acoustic and drag forces are utilized for the selection of good quality and highly motile sperm. Reproduced from ref. 74 with permission from Royal Society of Chemistry. (D and E) FertDish developed for the selection of motile spermatozoa and ICSI in one dish. (E) FertDish process flow: the channels are filled with polyvinylpyrrolidone media and semen sample. The dish is next covered with oil and placed in the incubator giving time for the motile spermatozoa to pass through the microchannels towards the centre of the dish. Its architecture allows for the placement of droplets containing denuded oocytes for rapid single sperm selection and injection. Reproduced from ref. 75 with permission from Royal Society of Chemistry. (F) Well-of-the-well system (WoW), a microfabricated culture dish in mammalian IVC. It consists of an array of microwells located in the centre, each to be filled with a single embryo. Such structure allows for the exchange of paracrine and autocrine factors between the embryos and diffusion of waste products of metabolism in the culture medium. Reprinted from ref. 76 with permission from Elsevier. | |
The benefits of microfluidics include significant reduction of reagent consumption, feasibility of usage, possible integration with other techniques, rapid fluid manipulation, closer recreation of microphysiological structures and real-time monitoring of the processes. Although the list of advantages can be further expanded with the growing application field, microfluidic technology has its downsides. These include complex operation and fabrication, the necessity for standardization of novel protocols, the difficulty of translation to mass production and the requirement of additional equipment, i.e. for the fabrication of microstructures, but also for the operation, e.g. pumps for the medium supply as well as various microfluidic setup components such as tubing, connectors and alike. Some of these drawbacks, however, can be overcome by entering the field of digital microfluidics (DMF). The principal operation of DMF microdevices lies in the programmable manipulation of discrete droplets on an array of insulated electrodes on a chip.83 The design of the electrodes determines the direction of droplet motion, creating virtual microfluidic channels excluding the requirement for external pumps and tubing. Moreover, the operation is fully programmable enabling faster translation and automation of standard laboratory protocols. Inclusion of digital microdevices in the workflows would not require extensive training of the personnel as most of the manual operations are replaced by the software, thereby minimizing the occurrence of human factor mistakes. This article aims to present the existing solutions based on the use of electric fields for in vitro cell and microdroplet processing in ARTs. The benefits and challenges of their application in assisted reproduction are debated on in the Discussion section.
Electric fields in ARTs
Microdevices allowing for the handling and analysis of mammalian gametes and early embryos in vitro by means of an applied electric field utilize the phenomena of dielectrophoresis (DEP) and associated electrorotation (ER) as well as electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD). DEP has been widely exploited in various bioapplications such as nano- and microparticles' processing and manipulation of cells, including cancer and stem cells, viruses, yeast and bacteria, DNA or other biomarkers.84–86 Additionally, DEP proved useful for the separation of bioparticles from complex biological samples, including sperm cells in forensic sciences.87 EWOD microsystems have been applied in liquid lenses, in display technology, as DNA and (bio)chemical reactors, in diagnostics, immunoassays and cell culture88–91 and a number of companies offer DMF solution in these sectors of technology.92 The great advantage is the possibility towards the fabrication of portable devices which can be translated into mobile lab-on-a-chip (LoC) and point-of-care (PoC) microsystems.93,94 Moreover, the possibilities of DMF applications seem unlimited as these devices are ready-to-use, both within and beyond the laboratory environment, and more of these point-of-use tools are continuously being developed.95 Companies like digi.bio (https://digi.bio) and sci-bots (https://sci-bots.com) offer technical support in the translation of chemical and biological protocols onto the device along with the software and the chips. OpenDrop (https://gaudi.ch/OpenDrop/) is an open source DMF platform which can be adapted to fit specific research purposes. Recently, the instrument was transformed to enable the remote control of microdroplets onto the chip for glucose detection and protein synthesis.96 Such efforts pave the way towards the automation of often complex laboratory workflows which are time-consuming and require a lot of manual interventions.
Research articles covering microdevices developed for the in vitro manipulation and assessment of gametes and embryos with DEP and ER in the last decade (2010–2020) and with EWOD (2009–2020, including an application for the in vitro handling of a non-mammalian embryo) were analysed. In general, DEP and EWOD chips can be manufactured with the same materials and techniques that are common for the fabrication of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). Printed circuit boards (PCBs) or glass serve as substrates on top of which metal (for instance gold, platinum, chromium, and copper) electrodes are deposited or patterned by means of photolithography followed by wet or dry etching. Indium tin oxide (ITO) is an alternative conductive material used in the fabrication of transparent microchips.91 Vapour or atomic layer deposition techniques can be used for the application of insulating dielectric coatings (such as parylenes,97 SiO2, Si3N4 and metal oxides including Al2O3, HfO2, and Ta2O5, among others).98 Spincoating is used to deposit functional coatings like polymer dielectrics (e.g. polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), SU-8)91,99 as well as fluoropolymers which serve as hydrophobic layers (Teflon, Cytop, Fluoropel).100 Information about the materials used for the construction of chips considered herein along with the objectives, methods, main findings and species are listed in Tables 1–4. The configuration of the chip and the cell type determine the strength of the applied electric field required for cell and microdroplet motion.
Table 1 Dielectrophoresis in studies on gametes
No |
Title and year |
Objective |
Materials |
Methods |
Main results |
Species |
Ref. |
1 |
Enrichment of bovine X-sperm using microfluidic dielectrophoretic chip: a proof-of- concept study, 2020 |
Development of a MF-DEP chip for sperm sorting |
ITO electrodes on glass, PDMS microchannel, silicone tubing (loading) |
60 μL sperm suspension DEP trapping: 4, 6, 8 V at 1–20 MHz |
Strongest pDEP response: X-sperm at 8 V at 20 MHz, Y-sperm at 4 V at 1 MHz |
Bovine |
124
|
Quality of sperm decreased in low conductivity medium |
Double sorting at 4 V at 1 MHz, flow rate 0.1 μl s−1 significantly increased efficiency |
2 |
Distinct and independent dielectrophoretic behaviour of the head and tail of sperm and its potential for the safe sorting and isolation of rare spermatozoa, 2019 |
DEP chip for sorting of rare sperm cells |
ITO and Cr/Au electrodes for simultaneous manipulation of the sperm head and tail |
AC electric signal at 16–20 Vpp at various frequencies |
Independent crossover frequencies of the sperm head and tail |
Human |
120
|
Curved electrodes in the sorting chip |
Manipulation of the sperm using the tail, while distancing the head containing DNA from high electric field |
PDMS microchannel |
Sigmacote coating |
3 |
AC-electric-field induced parthenogenesis of mouse oocyte, 2018 |
Parthenogenetic activation of murine oocytes |
ITO electrodes |
Time dependence: 1–10 minutes with pDEP AC 10 V at 1 MHz |
Parthenogenetic activation successful: 80% of oocytes at 266,8 kV m−1, 50% at 133,4 kV m−1 |
Mouse |
136
|
Electrical field intensity: 1 min at 5–40 Vpp at 1 MHz |
4 |
Towards microfluidic sperm refinement: impedance-based analysis and sorting of sperm cells, 2016 |
Development of a label-free, non-invasive MF chip for sperm analysis based on impedance measurements and sorting by DEP |
Borofloat wafers, Ti/Pt electrodes, PerMX3020 foil, poly(L-lysine)-grafted-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG, SuSoS) coating |
Impedance measurements detection of cytoplasmic droplet |
16/18 anomalous sperm positively identified |
Boar |
122
|
DEP focusing: 3 V, 10 MHz |
13/18 normal sperm cells positively identified |
2 chip designs: impedance detection (1) and impedance detection and DEP sorting (2) |
DEP sorting: 2 V, 15 MHz |
Sorting of sperm cells and polystyrene beads by DEP based on impedance |
5 |
Dielectrophoresis of spermatozoa in viscoelastic medium, 2015 |
Investigation of sperm motility parameters for selection in ARTs |
Theoretical analysis of sperm parameters under DEP force in a viscoelastic fluid |
Oldroyd-B model |
Velocities of spermatozoa presented as a function of the beating pattern and DEP force |
Human model |
123
|
DEP force on sperm cells higher by an order of magnitude in a viscoelastic medium |
6 |
AC electric field induced dipole-based on-chip 3D cell rotation, 2014 |
Development of the platform for 3D cell rotation with the use of AC electric fields |
4 side micro-milled wall electrodes, 2 ITO bottom electrodes, mylar insulator, brass support for micro-milling, 25 × 25 mm cover slip as electrical and thermal barrier |
10 Vpp and 20 Vpp at 10 kHz- 10 MHz |
No effective difference in the rotation of ZP-intact and ZP-free oocytes |
Bovine |
118
|
Yaw rotation: side wall electrodes with |
Air bubble formation below 10 kHz |
90° phase shift, equal amplitudes |
No differences between clockwise and anti-clockwise rotation |
In-plane rotation: below 10 Vpp no rotation |
Pitch rolling rotation: 2 bottom electrodes (50° phase shift) and side wall electrodes (2 grounded, 2 floating), equal amplitudes |
Out-of-plane rotation: at 10 V and 10 kHz, at above 15 V increased rates |
7 |
Sperm cell manipulation employing dielectrophoresis, 2013 |
DEP chip for selection of immature and mature sperm cells |
Microchannels with arrays of cylindrical insulators |
Application of DC potentials between 200 V and 1500 V for 30–60 seconds |
Sperm trapping: 800 V: mature cells |
Rat |
121
|
Borosilicate glass, Cr, photoresist |
1000 V: mature and little spermatogenic |
1200 V: mature sperms exhibit stronger nDEP response, thus spermatogenic cells are separated |
Assessment of sperm cell viability under experimental conditions |
8 |
Motile and non-motile sperm diagnostic manipulation using optoelectronic tweezers, 2010 |
OET response of human spermatozoa for separation of motile and non-motile sperm cells |
PEG (poly(ethylene glycol)) coating |
OET (40 mW cm−2), 30 s |
Dead sperm: weak nDEP or no response |
Human |
125
|
Amorphous silicon electrode, 10 uM silicon dioxide with melted onto the surface PEG-silane (Nektar). ITO electrode coated with PEG-silane (Nektar) |
Tryptan blue dye viability reference |
Live sperm: pDEP |
COMET assay (Trevigen, USA): DNA fragmentation |
No differences in DNA fragmentation between groups exposed to high and low dose of energy, isotonic and pure semen samples after OET |
Low dose: 10 Vpp at 100 kHz, 80 mW cm−2, 20 s, high dose: 20 Vpp at 100 kHz, 80 mW |
Compatibility with unwashed semen samples |
Velocity measurements at 9 Vpp at 100 kHz, 40 mW cm−2 |
9 |
A noninvasive, motility independent, sperm sorting method and technology to identify and retrieve individual viable nonmotile sperm for intracystoplasmic sperm injection, 2010 |
OET based microfluidic platform to distinguish between individual viable and nonviable nonmotile human sperm cells for ICSI |
Glass with ITO electrodes, bottom plate coated with a 1 μm film of amorphous silicon |
Frequency: 100 kHz |
Viable sperm: pDEP |
Human |
126
|
Up to 15 min OET assay |
Nonviable sperm: nDEP or no response |
Tryptan blue dye viability reference |
No visible damage to the cells |
10 |
A novel micropit device integrates automated cell positioning by dielectrophoresis and nuclear transfer by electrofusion, 2010 |
Automation of somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) inside a MF device by positioning and electrofusion of cell couplets |
Coplanar Ti electrodes on borosilicate glass, SU-8 insulator (4 and 22 μm thick) with micropits (diameters for 4 μm thick: 10, 20, 30, 40 μm; for 22 μm thick: 20, 30, 40, 80 μm) |
DEP positioning: 3–6 Vrms at 1 MHz |
Fusion rates comparable with standard bovine NT: oocyte–oocyte (69%), oocyte–follicular cells (50%), oocyte–fibroblast (78%) |
Bovine |
137
|
Fusion DC pulses: 80 V- 120 V |
Cell fusion of all cell types achieved between 110 and 120 V |
Cell lysis at voltages above 8 Vrms upon positioning and at 160 V fusion |
Oocyte donor cell elongation and micropit structure imprinting on its surface at 6 Vrms (4 μm SU-8 with 40 μm micropit) |
Dielectrophoresis and electrorotation
Dielectrophoresis is an electrokinetic phenomenon first described by Herbert Pohl in 1951 as the motion of bioparticles in response to the application of non-uniform electric fields.101 If we consider a spherical dielectric particle in an electrolyte solution and apply an electric field, charges will accumulate at the interface between the particle and the surrounding electrolyte. In the case of a non-uniform electric field, the forces exerted on the sides of a polarizable particle are different thereby creating an imbalance in charge distribution which leads to the motion of the particle. It can experience positive DEP (pDEP) when the dipole's direction is towards the high strength electric field. In the case of negative DEP (nDEP), the situation is reversed, so the particle is repelled from the strong electric field (Fig. 3A). The dipole moment of the particle is a function of frequency, so the direction of the particle's passage depends on the frequency of the applied electric signal as well. Electrorotation of particles can be obtained in the microchip configuration with quadrupole electrodes. By the application of signals with different phases to the electrodes, a rotating electric field is induced (Fig. 3B).102
|
| Fig. 3 Electric fields in lab-on-a-chip microfabrication: dielectrophoresis, electrorotation and electrowetting on dielectric. (A) Dielectric spherical particle responses to the non-uniform electric field: positive and negative DEP. Adapted from ref. 103 with permission from Springer. (B) Quadrupole electrodes with signals with 90° phase shift to induce electrorotation. Adapted from ref. 103 with permission from Springer. (C) DEP response of polarizable particles (εp > εm) to the applied electric field. Crossover frequency: relation of Re[CM] with the frequency of the applied signal. Reproduced from ref. 86 with permission from MDPI (CC BY 4.0). (D) Droplet equilibrium. (E) EWOD representation in a sessile droplet experiment. (F) Closed and (G) open configuration of EWOD. Figures D–G were adapted from ref. 83 with permission from Springer. | |
For a spherical particle with radius a suspended in a medium, the expression describing the time averaged DEP force acting on that particle is expressed as:
where
εm is the medium permittivity, and ∇
E2 is the gradient of the applied electric field.
103 The Clausius–Mossotti (CM) factor which describes the relation between the frequency of the applied electric field and the particle's polarizability is given by:
where
and
are the complex permittivities of the particle and the medium, respectively. The crossover frequency is the frequency at which the particle changes its response from positive to negative DEP and inversely from nDEP to pDEP, the real part of the CM factor is equal to 0.
Fig. 3C shows the case in which living and dead cells can be distinguished by the application of a signal with frequency near to the crossover frequency. In this instance living cells will follow the red line while dead cells the black line undergoing pDEP and weak nDEP or no DEP, respectively.
DEP has been applied for the manipulation of bioparticles with size varying between ∼1 and ∼100 μm,102 however, the stimulation of smaller as well as bigger entities is possible. Two types of DEP microdevices can be distinguished: electrode DEP (eDEP) and insulator-based DEP (iDEP) in which the electrodes are protected by an insulating layer or a microstructure. The former allows for the creation of electric fields of high gradients using low voltages and thus enables the manipulation of micro scale particles. The latter generates electric fields of lower magnitude and has become applicable for the handling of nano scale (such as bacteria, viruses) and molecular size particles (such as biomolecules including DNA and proteins).104
Optoelectronic tweezers
The principle of optoelectronic tweezers (OET) operation is based on the application of light onto a photosensitive layer ensuing a dielectrophoretic force in the illuminated area. Applied light reacts with a coating of hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) and combined with external bias creates gradients of the electric field.105
Electrowetting on dielectric
Electrowetting on dielectric technology was developed in the 1990s,106 although the phenomenon was already observed earlier. It originates from electrocapillarity studied and was described by Gabriel Lippmann around 1873–1875.107–109 The expression describing EWOD actuation is the Young–Lippmann equation which demonstrates the relation of interfacial tensions between the three phases (Fig. 3D) and the change in surface energy under the influence of an electric field. Electrocapillarity refers to the capillary rise of the liquid under the influence of the electric potential.83 In conventional electrowetting (EW), as voltage is applied, an electric double layer (EDL) is created between the solid and the electrolyte. In electrowetting on dielectric, as the name suggests, a dielectric layer is incorporated between the electrode and the liquid. In both cases, the interfacial energy is modulated due to a charge imbalance in the EDL (EW), or the insulator (EWOD) caused by the external electric field. Consequently, the apparent contact angle θ of the liquid droplet on a solid surface is altered (Fig. 3E). The insulating coating plays a significant role in EWOD since the required voltage to induce surface wetting depends on its thickness and dielectric properties. Additionally, the most common practice includes coating of the insulator with a hydrophobic material (low surface energy) to achieve the highest possible initial contact angle with the aqueous conductive droplet.
The change of the contact angle as a function of the applied voltage (Young–Lippmann equation) is given by:
where
θ′ and
θ are the potentiated and initial contact angles of a liquid droplet on a solid surface, respectively,
V is the applied voltage,
γlv is the interfacial tension between the liquid and vapour and
c is the capacitance of the insulator.
Digital microfluidics allows for rapid transport, merging and splitting of pico- to microdroplets (10−12–10−6 l).110–113 Droplet motion is achieved on an array of electrodes. Two chip configurations exist: the droplet is either sandwiched between or placed on top of the electrode pairs. By sequential charging and discharging of the electrode pairs, the droplet movement is induced and as a result, the liquid is attracted towards the actuated electrode (Fig. 3F and G).
DEP and ER in ARTs
Gamete and embryo handling: positioning, selection, sorting
The size and shape of gametes and early embryos make them perfect candidates for on-chip manipulation by means of dielectrophoresis and electrorotation. Based on the study performed on 103 samples collected from men undergoing semen analysis for the assessment of fertility, the mean total sperm length was 48 μm, of which 4.31 μm, 2.04 μm and 43.76 μm were the head, the midpiece and the sperm tail, respectively.114 Although human blastocysts may be too big for DEP stimulation (∼194 μm on day 5),115 mature oocytes (110–120 μm)116 and immature oocytes (100–110 μm), which can be collected and successfully matured in in vitro setting,116,117 are applicable for on chip handling by DEP force. Moreover, bovine oocytes (∼120 μm), which more closely resemble the human egg in size,31 were rotated using electric fields.118 Murine oocytes (80 μm)31 as well as blastocysts (100–110 μm)119 can serve as promising tools for the investigation of the effects of the application of electric potential on the in vitro development of human embryos. Note that the above-mentioned size of oocytes and embryos provided in brackets is the diameter. The DEP force exerted on mammalian gametes and embryos can be calculated using models of a homogenous or single-shelled sphere, or an ellipsoid. Below, a summary of the work on DEP microelectromechanical systems published in the last decade divided by the cells handled including sperm, oocytes and embryos is provided. Additionally, significant information about the chips and protocol development is collected in chronological order in Tables 1 and 2.
Table 2 Dielectrophoresis in embryo studies
No |
Title and year |
Objective |
Materials |
Methods |
Main results |
Species |
Ref. |
Electrodes: ITO (indium tin oxide), amorphous silicon (a-Si), Cr (chromium), brass, Ti (titanium), Pt (platinum). Substrates: borosilicate glass, borofloat wafers, PCB (Printed Circuit Board). Coatings: photoresist, silicon dioxide, mylar, PerMX3020. Antifouling layers: PEG (polyethylene glycol), PEG-silane (Nektar), PLL-g-PEG (poly(L-ysine)-grafted-poly(ethylene glycol), SuSoS), Sigmacote (Sigma Aldrich). Walls/dish: PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane), PVC (polyvinylchloride).
|
1 |
Using a dielectrophoretic microfluidic biochip enhanced fertilization in vitro, 2020 |
Investigation of fertilization rates at various sperm concentrations |
ITO electrodes, PDMS microchannel |
DEP entrapment: 10 Vpp at 1 MHz for 1 min |
Verification of the influence of HTF, KSOM + AA, DEP buffer on fertilization and blastocyst rates (no differences) |
Mouse |
128
|
Coculture in MF channel for 1 h |
At total sperm count 3000 fertilization compatible with standard IVF group (17.2% +/− 7.5% vs. 14.5 ± 7.5%) |
Static droplet culture |
2 |
Automated embryo manipulation and rotation via robotic nDEP-tweezers, 2021 |
Non-invasive technique for manipulation of mouse embryos |
PDMS cover, microchip mounted on a PCB, PVC petri dish on amotorized stage |
Inverted chip placed 200 μm above the embryo |
Effects of the chip height (100–250 μm) and electric field strength (5–9 V) investigated |
Mouse |
129
|
DEP signal: 3 V |
Speed of translation above 5 μm s−1: embryo shape distortion |
Frequency range 50–500 kHz |
Relation of angular velocity and electric field strength (ER) |
Stage velocity: 4 μm s−1 or less |
Crossover frequency (ER): 150 kHz |
3 |
Dielectrophoretic microfluidic device for in vitro fertilization, 2018 |
MF-DEP platform to avoid unnecessary oocyte damage during IVF |
ITO electrodes, PDMS microchannel |
DEP entrapment: 10 Vpp at 1 MHz, 30 s |
Focus on small sperm: oocyte ratio |
Mouse |
130
|
Droplets with gametes sorted with pneumatic valves |
Fertilization rates: 39.4% at 500 and 50.2% at 2000 |
KSOM/HTF culture |
Blastocyst rates: 33.3% at 500 and 25.1% at 2000 |
4 |
Embryo formation from low sperm concentration by using dielectrophoretic force, 2015 |
MF-DEP microchip to imitate the mammalian oviduct during fertilization |
PDMS microchannel, Cr and Au electrodes on a glass substrate |
DEP entrapment: AC 10 Vpp at 1 MHz |
Sperm concentration in oocyte vicinity increased from 1.5 × 106 sperm per ml (standard) to ∼6.0 × 107 per ml with trapping |
Mouse |
131
|
Flow rate: 0,1 μl min−1 |
Fertilization rate: 51.58% |
Next, static droplet culture (until 8 cell stage) |
5 |
Preimplantation mouse embryo selection guided by light-induced dielectrophoresis, 2010 |
DEP for the selection of post-cleavage embryos for the purpose of embryo transfer |
ITO glass, a-Si:H photosensitive layer, poly-ethylene glycol (PEG) coating (antiadhesive) |
DEP of morphologically identical embryos cultured in M16 and KSOM+AA media |
Determination of DEP response of preimplantation embryos at subsequent developmental stages |
Mouse |
127
|
1-cell mouse embryo as an insulated core |
Comparison of M16 vs. KSOM + AA cultured embryos |
Blastocyst as an insulated shell |
Contracted and granular embryos after the OET exposure cultured until blastocyst stages |
DEP signal: 20 Vpp at 100 kHz |
Prolonged exposure to low conductivity medium: embryo death and decreased speed of OET |
Suggestion: strongest nDEP of embryos points to the most matured ones |
Sperm
Shuchat et al. fabricated a microsystem to sort and investigate the properties of human spermatozoa.120 The study revealed that both the head and the tail have intrinsic dielectric features and thus were modelled separately, as a sphere and an ellipsoid, respectively (Fig. 4A–E). Their crossover frequencies were evaluated experimentally. It was found that at low frequencies, both the head and tail exhibited nDEP while at high frequencies, a positive DEP response is achieved. In the middle range, however, the tail underwent pDEP while the head was exposed to nDEP. The proposed sorting microdevice utilized the pDEP of the tail, while distancing the head, which contains the genetic material, away from the high electric fields.
|
| Fig. 4 Examples of DEP microdevices for sperm processing. (A) Human spermatozoon with separately modelled spherical head and ellipsoidal tail. (B and C) Distinct responses of the tail and the head under the influence of the applied electric field (medium conductivity 110 mS m−1): (B) pDEP of the tail and strong nDEP of the head at 300 kHz, (C) pDEP of the tail and weak nDEP of the head at 1500 kHz. (D and E) Example of the DEP chip for sperm sorting and focusing. (E) Live sperm cells (1 & 2) trapped by DEP of the tail while debris (3) flows with the fluid. Figures A–E were republished with permission of John Wiley & Sons Inc from ref. 120; permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (F) Detection of the cytoplasmic droplet on the sperm tail based on impedance measurements. (G) Proof of concept experiment: DEP sorting of polystyrene beads and spermatozoa based on the different impedometric characteristics. Figures F and G were reproduced from ref. 122 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry. | |
An insulator DEP (iDEP) based microdevice was fabricated by Rosales-Cruzaley et al. for the separation of mature and immature sperm.121 Differences in morphologies among spermatogenic (immature) and mature sperm give rise to various DEP responses when subjected to an electric field. Successful trapping and sorting at 1200 V was based on the distinguishably stronger nDEP of mature sperm cells. Additionally, the cell viability was evaluated and found to decrease upon increasing the exposure time and the magnitude of the electric field. Nevertheless, 75% of cells remained viable upon treatment for 60 s at 800 V.
An impedance based sperm analysis microsystem was developed for the detection of a cytoplasmic droplet on the flagellum of the sperm, an anomaly arising during spermatogenesis.122 De Wagenaar et al. utilized different impedometric characteristics of morphologically distinct normal and anomalous spermatozoa which passed through the microchannel. Next, in a proof-of-concept experiment, sperm cells and polystyrene beads were sorted by DEP based on impedance measurements (Fig. 4F and G).
J. Koh and Marcos performed a theoretical analysis of a sperm cell in a viscoelastic medium subjected to DEP force to predict the sorting efficiency in an in vivo-like microenvironment.123 Motility parameters such as morphology, dimensions, velocity and the frequency of the flagellum beating were analysed using an Oldroyd-B model. A relation between the spermatozoa velocities and the beating pattern of the flagellum and DEP was revealed. Interestingly, the DEP force exerted on the sperm was found to be higher by an order of magnitude under the proposed conditions which can be useful in the development of a novel, more biomimetic (D)MF device. Employing DEP as a technique for gender sperm sorting was suggested which was later executed experimentally.124
T. Wongtawan et al. developed a microchip for categorization of X- and Y-sperm. It was suggested that the differences in the composition of cell membrane proteins and electrokinetic potential resulted in the different DEP response.124 The study showed that Y-sperm was more sensitive to frequency changes, while X-sperm to changes in voltage. However, different bull donors, buffers, electric signals and fluid flow rates affected the grouping process. Adaptation of the chip for double sorting at 4 V at 1 MHz, flow rate 0.1 μl s−1, resulted in significant reduction of the Y-sperm in the sorted sperm, thereby enhancing the chip efficiency.
Optoelectronic tweezers proved useful for spermatozoa sorting and two examples of such applications exist. Ohta et al. developed OET for the manipulation of motile and non-motile human spermatozoa.125 Dead sperm cells could be distinguished by the lack of or a very weak nDEP response, while living sperms underwent pDEP. Additionally, the assessment of DNA damage among sperms exposed to the independent components of the OET platform was performed (low-conductivity medium, passage of cells through the microfluidic chip, dose of OET) and no differences between the groups were found. Moreover, the device proved compatible with the unwashed semen samples.
An OET assay for sorting of viable non-motile vs. non-viable non-motile human spermatozoa was proposed by Garcia et al.126 Non-motile viable sperm cells were attracted to the induced electric field, whereas non-viable ones were repelled from it or exhibited no response. The results indicated that the motility independent assay is comparable with the standard Trypan Blue staining reference. This microsystem was proposed as a tool for sperm selection for ICSI when motility is not present or hardly detectable.
Oocyte and embryo
J. K. Valley et al. proposed optoelectronic tweezers for the selection of preimplantation mouse embryos.127 The DEP response of 1-cell, 2-cell, 4- to 16-cell until morula, early blastocysts and late blastocysts was evaluated. Morphologically identical embryos cultured in M16 or KSOM + AA were used in the study as the former suboptimally sustains murine early embryo development in vitro. It was found that both M16 and KSOM + AA, early embryos until the morula stage underwent pDEP at 20 Vpp at 100 kHz, while early blastocysts were repulsed from the light pattern exhibiting nDEP response (Fig. 5A–C). Some embryos appeared contracted and granular after OET treatment. However, despite visible changes in their structure, they were successfully cultured until blastocysts and thus altered morphology was linked to the low conductivity DEP medium. Based on the results, it was suggested that among morphologically undistinguishable mouse embryos, the one exhibiting the strongest nDEP response is the most matured.
|
| Fig. 5 Examples of DEP microdevices for oocyte and embryo processing. (A) Light-induced DEP of a developing mouse embryo. (B) Manipulation of 1-cell embryo with pDEP (attraction towards the light pattern). (C) Embryo at the blastocyst stage undergoing nDEP (repulsion from the light pattern). Scale bars represent 100 microns. Figures A–C were reproduced from ref. 127 with permission from PLOS ONE. (D) Configuration of the chip for 3D rotation of bovine oocytes. Schematic representation of (E) in-plane and (F) out-of-plane rotation of a spherical particle subjected to the electric field. (G) Clockwise in-plane rotation of a ZP-free oocyte. (H) Clockwise rolling rotation of a lysed oocyte. Figures D–H were reproduced from ref. 118 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry. | |
K. Huang et al. proposed a nDEP microdevice with a proportional integral derivative (PID) controller for precise manipulation of mouse embryos.128 The inverted microsystem consisting of quadrupole electrodes mounted on a motorized platform was utilized to transport, position and rotate murine embryos. Effects of chip height and input voltages were investigated and a set of parameters for safe handling was established. Additionally, it was found that the increasing speed of translation, which was achieved by the actuation of two pairs of oppositely situated electrodes with signals of the same amplitude with a 90° phase shift, would result in the distorted shape of manipulated cells. Electrorotation was obtained by potential application to four electrodes with equal amplitude and 90° phase shift, upon which a relation between the strength of the applied electric field and the angular velocity was established.
Benhal et al. fabricated a microdevice for the 3D rotation of zona pellucida-intact (ZP-intact) and zona pellucida-free (ZP-free) bovine oocytes.118 The chip consisting of four side walls and two bottom electrodes was designed to enable the two-axial rotation of mammalian eggs (Fig. 5D–H). Vertical electrodes were used for the yaw rotation whereas bottom electrodes in combination with side wall electrodes allowed for the pitch rolling rotation. The influence of the frequency, amplitude and medium conductivity on the motion of bovine ova was evaluated and compelling observations were made. Firstly, the oocytes followed the Gaussian distribution characteristic in the range of applied frequencies, i.e. at low or high frequencies they did not undergo electrorotation, but in the middle range a peak frequency was distinguished at which they rotated in the fastest manner. Next, the increase in the amplitude of the applied potential resulted in the faster rotation and a relation between the frequency and amplitude of the applied signal was found. At the frequency of 1 MHz bovine ova reached the peak rotation at 20 V, while at 2 MHz the peak was found at 10 V. Lastly, no differences in the rotation rates were observed between the media used which differed in conductivity.
DEP in other studies: IVF, cloning
IVF.
H.-Y. Huang et al. proposed three microchips utilizing positive dielectrophoresis for the fertilization of murine oocytes in vitro.129–131 In all studies, an AC signal of 10 Vpp at 1 MHz was used for the entrapment and co-incubation of gametes. Various microchannel configurations were created to mimic the conditions in the fallopian tubes at the time of fertilization in vivo and to avoid the unnecessary handling of gametes as is the case for traditional IVF. In all cases, the pDEP trapping of gametes resulted in higher fertilization rates at low sperm-oocyte ratios and increased sperm cell concentration in the vicinity of the murine ovum. The calculated transmembrane potential in ref. 129 for the oocyte and sperm under pDEP trapping conditions was 8.47 mV and 8.95 mV, respectively (electroporation of the cell membrane occurs at 100 mV and higher). Thus, the DEP manipulation was considered safe for the cells. This technique was proposed as a non-invasive alternative for ICSI, especially for patients with oligoospermia, which yet allows for natural fertilization to occur in vitro.
Cloning.
Parthenogenesis is a form of asexual reproduction in which the oocyte is activated in the absence of a sperm,16 an important aspect in cloning studies. In mammals, it can be induced by exposure to chemical substances which can affect the intracellular calcium oscillation pattern, such as ethanol, strontium chloride and others.132–134 It has been shown recently that parthenogenesis can be affected by numerous aspects in mouse oocytes.135 H.-Y. Huang et al. developed a DEP microchip for parthenogenetic activation of mouse eggs.136 The rates of activation were independent of the time of DEP exposure varying between 1 and 10 minutes at 10 V and 1 MHz. However, a dependence on the strength of the applied electric field was found. 50% and 80% of oocytes were successfully activated by the application of high intensity electric fields of 133.4 kV m−1 and 266.8 kV m−1, respectively. More than 80% of ova remained viable for both electric field strengths.
Electrofusion is a technology that involves the production of a cell with new genetic material and has been applied in cloning, regenerative medicine, plant hybridization and somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). Clow et al. developed a DEP microdevice with micropit structures of various diameters for the positioning and electrofusion of bovine cell couplets.137 By the application of AC signals for cell positioning and DC fusion pulses, cells were immobilized at the desired spot(s) on the insulating film and allowed for successful nuclear transfer (NT). Bovine oocyte–oocyte (69%), oocyte–follicular cell (50%) and oocyte–fibroblast (78%) couplets were fused at rates proportional to the standard bovine cell NT. Cell lysis occurred at voltages exceeding 8 Vrms upon cell positioning and at higher rates at 160 V DC pulse.
EWOD in ARTs
Although electrowetting on dielectric technology has already entered the field of on-chip manipulation of reproductive cells, it is more extensively utilized as a chemical reactor for (bio)fluid processing. This technology proved suitable for the manipulation of culture medium microdroplets with gametes and embryos during the dynamic automated culture. Furthermore, EWOD can be used for the processing of spent embryo culture medium, an important step in the assessment of the embryo developmental competence based on the analysis of its secretome. Information about the chips and protocol development for the in vitro manipulation of gametes and embryos as well as analysis of the culture medium are collected in chronological order in Tables 3 and 4.
Table 3 Electrowetting on dielectric in gametes and embryo manipulation
No |
Title and year |
Objective |
Materials |
Methods |
Main results |
Species |
Ref. |
1 |
Digital microfluidic dynamic culture of mammalian embryos on an electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) chip, 2015 |
Development of a DMF chip to mimic the fallopian tube and embryo travel in vivo |
ITO electrodes, silicon nitride and spun on glass, Teflon |
Single embryo in 1 μl droplet |
Comparable blastocyst rates of dynamic EWOD and static culture (88.9 ± 4.2% vs. 92.1 ± 10.8%) |
Mouse |
139
|
4 μl oil overlay |
Higher rates of hatching blastocyst on EWOD chip than in static culture (50 ± 9.8% vs. 21.2 ± 5.5%) |
EWOD manipulation: 60–68.5 Vrms at 500 Hz |
10/19 viable pups after embryo transfer into 3 recipients |
2 |
Fertilization of mouse gametes in vitro using a digital microfluidic system, 2015 |
Dynamic fertilization and culture of mouse embryos on a DMF chip |
ITO electrodes, silicon nitride and spun on glass, Teflon, PDMS to create the oil bath |
5 μl droplets containing sperm cells (various concentrations) and cohorts of oocytes (10) |
Biocompatibility tested with static culture of 2-cell embryos |
Mouse |
138
|
EWOD manipulation: 60 Vrms at 500 Hz |
Fertilization rate correlated with the amount of sperm cells in the sperm droplet |
The developmental rates conversely correlated with the sperm concentration on the DMF chip |
3 |
Digital microfluidic processing of mammalian embryos for vitrification, 2014 |
Execution of the process of embryo vitrification on chip |
Cr and ITO electrodes, parylene C, Teflon |
200 nl droplet containing embryo mixed with cryoprotectant droplets |
Minimized timing and washing steps |
Mouse embryos |
142
|
EWOD manipulation: 55–75 Vrms at 15 kHz |
Exclusion of manual pipetting |
Comparable survival rates DMF vs. manual (77% vs. 73%) |
Comparable developmental rates DMF vs. manual (90% vs. 91%) |
4 |
Transport of live yeast and zebrafish embryo on a droplet (“digital”) microfluidic platform, 2009 |
Transport of live yeast and a zebrafish embryo on a DMF transport |
Au electrodes, ITO top electrode, parylene C or silicon dioxide, Teflon |
5 μm live yeast in 500 nl droplets |
On chip manipulation of viable yeast |
Live yeast, zebrafish embryo |
140
|
EWOD manipulation: 80 Vrms at 7 kHz |
Dechorionation of a 500 μm zebrafish embryo |
500 μm zebrafish embryo in 20 μl droplets |
Culture of an embryo which experienced electrolysis during on chip operation |
EWOD manipulation: 95–105 Vrms at 8 kHz |
Table 4 Electrowetting on dielectric in embryo assessment
No |
Title and year |
Objective |
Materials |
Methods |
Main results |
Species |
Ref. |
Electrodes: ITO (indium tin oxide), Cr (chromium), Au (gold). Insulating layers: SU-8/Al2O3, silicon dioxide, SU-8, silicon nitride and spun on glass (SOG), parylene C. Hydrophobic coatings: Cytop, Teflon. Substrates: glass, PCB (printed circuit board). Walls: PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane). Additional: magnetic beads, magnetic beads conjugated with antibodies.
|
1 |
Simultaneous detection of two growth factors from human single embryo culture medium by bead based digital microfluidic chip, 2020 |
Detection of IL-1β and TNF-α from spent culture media after single human embryo culture |
ITO electrodes, SU-8/Al2O3, Cytop, magnetic beads conjugated with antibodies specific for the biomarkers of interest |
Fluorescence detection of both factors from 32.5 nl, 325 nl and 520 nl droplets |
Concentration of IL-1β in blastocyst medium (BM) higher than in cleavage medium (CM), no change in the concentration of TNF-a between CM and BM |
Culture media from human embryo culture |
146
|
Culture media collected without interfering the in vitro embryo culture |
Expression of biomarkers varied between embryos from the same patient |
2 |
A medical innovation: a new and improved method of DNA extraction with electrowetting-on-dielectric of genetic testing in- vitro fertilization (IVF), 2020 |
Application of EWOD chip for extraction of cell free DNA from mouse embryo culture medium |
ITO electrodes, silicon dioxide or SU-8, Cytop, magnetic beads |
100 nl droplets |
Cf.-DNA extraction protocol adapted) followed by qPCR analysis |
Culture media from mouse embryo culture |
145
|
EWOD manipulation: 50–70 Vrms at 2 kHz |
Not all operations achieved on the chip (buffer incompatibility) |
Chip cleaning procedure proposed |
On-chip cf.-DNA extraction higher than the standard procedure (18% vs. 7%) |
3 |
Extraction of cell free DNA from an embryo culture medium using micro scale bioreagents on EWOD, 2020 |
Application of EWOD chip for the extraction of cell free DNA from mouse embryo culture medium |
DropBot model DB3-120 from Sci-bots with magnetic beads |
1–1.8 μl droplets |
Entire extraction performed on chip followed by qPCR analysis |
Culture media from mouse embryo culture |
144
|
EWOD manipulation: 80–100 Vpp (depending on the buffer), 2 kHz |
On-chip cf.-DNA extraction higher than the standard procedure (23% vs. 14.8%) |
Chip cleaning procedure proposed |
On chip handling of gametes and embryos: IVF, IVC, vitrification
H.-Y. Huang et al. fabricated an open EWOD chip for the fertilization of mouse oocytes by merging 5 μl droplets containing sperm cells (at various concentrations) and ten ova followed by dynamic culture.138 Droplets were translated and merged with 60 Vrms at 500 Hz. The results showed that the fertilization rates correlated with the amount of sperm cells in the sperm droplet, i.e. the higher the concentration of sperm, the higher the percentage of fertilized oocytes. The developmental rates, however, were found to conversely correlate with the sperm concentration, suggesting that the excess of sperm cells remaining in the culture medium droplet affects the early embryo development. In the open device configuration, splitting of the droplet is so far impossible to achieve. Thus, the inhibited embryo development was associated with medium instability (such as imbalance in ion concentration, pH) caused by the presence of the spermatozoa.
The same group proposed a similar EWOD platform for the dynamic culture of mouse embryos.139 Single 2-cell mouse embryos were dynamically cultured in 1 μl droplets of culture medium covered by 4 μl of oil on the chip with coplanar electrodes and in a closed configuration (Fig. 6A and B). Droplet motion was achieved by the application of 60–68.5 Vrms at 500 Hz. Generally, the blastocyst rates of the dynamically actuated embryos were comparable with the ones cultured statically. The dynamic group, however, showed a significant increase in the percentage of hatching blastocysts. Additionally, embryos cultured on the chip (19) were transferred to three recipient mice and resulted in the births of viable pups (10/19) among all three of them.
|
| Fig. 6 EWOD microsystems for processing and assessment of embryos. (A) EWOD chip for the dynamic culture of mammalian embryos. 1) Contact pad, 2) microfluidic channel (electrodes), 3) spacer (260 μm). Scale bar 6 mm. (B) Mouse embryo at subsequent developmental stages cultured on the digital microfluidic chip. Figures A and B were reproduced from ref. 139 with permission from PLOS ONE. (C) Standard and on-chip protocol for vitrification of mouse embryos. ES-equilibrium solution, VS- vitrification solution. 1) Cryoprotectant stage, 2) extraction stage, 3) freezing stage. (D) On-chip mixing of droplets of culture medium (CM) containing a mouse embryo with droplets of vitrification solution (VS). Figures C and D were reproduced from ref. 142 with permission from PLOS ONE. (E) Pattern of the electrodes for simultaneous on-chip detection of IL-1β and TNF-α. (F) Schematic representation of simultaneous detection of two single-embryo growth factors (SEGF) from culture medium. Figures E and F were reprinted from ref. 146 with permission from Elsevier. | |
Son et al. developed an EWOD chip for the automated handling of live yeast and zebrafish embryos, which, to the best of our knowledge, was the first attempt of embryo manipulation by EWOD.140 5 μm yeast cells were suspended in 0.5 μl droplets and successfully transported with 80 Vrms at 7 kHz with no viable yeast left on the chip after motion. A 500 μm diameter zebrafish embryo was handled in a 20 μl droplet with voltages ranging from 95 Vrms to 105 Vrms. Additionally, embryo dechorionation was achieved by mixing the droplets containing the embryo and the digestive agent. The process of chorion removal, an envelope surrounding the embryo, is common in ecotoxicological testing for better visualization, exposure to chemicals and cell handling (microinjection, transfection).141 On-chip dechorionation was proposed as an alternative to the standard, manual procedure. Interestingly, one of the zebrafish embryos was exposed to electrolysis after which it was removed from the platform and cultured in a fresh water tank. Despite the occurrence of electrolysis, the embryo successfully developed further.
Pyne et al. developed an EWOD chip for the processing of mammalian embryos for vitrification, an “ice-free” rapid cryopreservation technique in which cells are mixed with cryoprotectants.142 This method avoids the formation of intracellular ice upon rapid freezing. This preferred approach in gamete and embryo cryopreservation became dominant over the fresh donor embryo transfer in recent years.143 In the study, the adapted human and mouse embryo vitrification protocols were translated for the on-chip manipulation of a single murine embryo (Fig. 6C and D). Droplets containing the embryo and cryoprotective reagents were mixed, split and transported with 55–75 Vrms at 15 kHz. Survival and developmental rates were assessed by morphological grading before and after freezing as well as after thawing and culture of 8-cell stage embryos for 24 h. Serum-free culture medium was used to avoid chip surface contamination. The results of the on-chip vitrification were comparable with the standard, manual protocols.
Embryo assessment
A promising field of application of digital microfluidics is the isolation of developmentally significant biomarkers from spent cell culture medium. EWOD chips are under evaluation as instruments in various “omics”, fields of study such as genomics, proteomics, transcriptomics, cellomics and metabolomics,92 the main purpose being the characterization of molecules that are involved in various cellular processes to better understand their function.
Two procedures of cell-free DNA (cf.-DNA) extraction with DMF from spent mouse embryo culture medium were proposed recently. Alias et al. used the commercially available platform DropBot (model DB120 from Sci-bots, https://shop.sci-bots.com/product/dropbot-db3-120-kit/) with magnetic beads for the isolation of cf.-DNA from culture medium collected at days 2.5 (4-cell stage) and 3.5 of culture (8-cell until morula stages). Depending on the buffer used in the protocol, the applied signals varied between 80 Vpp and 100 Vpp at 2 kHz for the transport of 1–1.8 μl droplets. A higher percentage of cf.-DNA was extracted from the EWOD chip as compared with the conventional method (23% vs. 14.8%, respectively).144 Another example is the EWOD chip with magnetic beads developed by Chiang et al.145 The DNA extraction protocol was previously adapted to the requirements of the microdevice. The performance of the microsystem was evaluated using two different dielectric layers, which was shown to affect the performance. The operating voltages ranged from 50 Vrms to 70 Vrms at 2 kHz for 100 nl droplets. The on-chip cf.-DNA isolation resulted in higher percentages as compared to the standard protocol (18% vs. 7%). However, not all of the extraction operations were achievable on the chip due to the incompatibility of some reagents with the proposed EWOD platform. In both cases, a cleaning procedure was proposed allowing for chip reusability.
Lee et al. fabricated a bead-based microchip for the simultaneous isolation of interleukin β (IL-1β) and tumour necrosis factor α (TNF-α).146 IL-1β is a cytokine secreted by growing mammalian embryos in vitro at later developmental stages (8-cell to blastocyst) and a correlation between its concentrations and the implantation rates was found.147 Thus, it could be considered a potential biomarker for embryo implantation. TNF-α was found to be involved in maintaining the balance between the embryotoxic and embryotrophic cytokines during early embryo development, and additionally affects the hormonal balance during gestation as well as influences the reproductive function in males.148 Both molecules were fluorescently detected with the use of magnetic beads conjugated with a specific antibody for each cytokine. 32.5, 325 and 520 nl droplets of spent human embryo culture medium and reagents were manipulated on the chip (Fig. 6E and F). Culture media from day 3 and days 5–6, cleavage medium (CM) and blastocyst medium (BM), respectively, were collected with no interference with the IVC protocol. It was shown that concentrations of IL-1β differed between the cleavage and blastocyst media while no changes in the levels of TNF-α were found. Interestingly, significant differences between the concentrations of growth factors can be found between the embryos collected from the same patient which calls for further validation of this technique exploiting an increased number of test samples. The extraction of these as well as other biomarkers could potentially serve as a non-invasive tool for the assessment of early embryonic development as well as facilitate the prediction of the implantation competence.
Discussion: benefits and challenges
Benefits of the application of electric fields in ARTs
The continuously growing field of application of DEP and EWOD biochips covers at present multiple operations which supersede or at least optimize the current techniques used in assisted reproduction. Direct manipulation of gametes and embryos ranges from positioning and entrapment, detection of anomalies, separation of living and dead, mature and immature, viable motile and viable non-motile sperm cells through the 3D rotation of oocytes, electrically induced parthenogenesis and electrofusion towards the selection of embryos at various developmental stages. Morphological grading of embryonic development in vitro could be supported by more advanced technologies for the in vitro assessment and selection of gametes and embryos for IVF. Moreover, IVF and IVC were successfully achieved on DEP and EWOD chips. Indirect application of EWOD microdevices for the isolation of cell-free DNA and other potentially valuable biomarkers of early embryonic development, and implantation from a single mammalian embryo during culture already outperforms the existing procedures. Importantly, it allows for the analysis on a single embryo level, thus far unachievable due to the constraints of standard approaches such as the requirement for large sample volumes (520 nl sample on EWOD platform vs. minimum 50 μl required for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ELISA).146 Until now, DEP and EWOD proved to be promising tools towards the improvement of IVF laboratory procedures. The advantages of microdevices utilizing DEP and EWOD in reproductive studies are listed in Table 5.
Table 5 Advantages of electric fields in assisted reproductive technologies
Method |
Beneficial effects |
Dielectrophoresis: handling of gametes and embryos (positioning, manipulation, selection) |
No formation of reactive oxygen species (centrifugation and washing of sperm) |
Non-invasive alternative to invasive gamete handling (pipetting, ICSI) |
No use of chemical agents upon parthenogenetic activation |
Alternative tool for morphological grading |
Non-invasive concentration of gametes: possible IVF for oligoospermic patients |
Electrowetting on dielectric: on-chip translation of nano- to microdroplets of culture medium (and/or reagents) with or without embryos/ gametes suspended within |
Significantly smaller samples volume: more biomimetic, dynamic culture |
Reduction of reagents and processing time |
Viable mouse pups born after on-chip manipulation: full IVF cycle completed |
Exclusion of manual operations such as pipetting |
Efficient cf.-DNA extraction |
Chip reusability after cleaning/recoating |
Analysis of the secretome of a single embryo with no interference during IVC protocol |
Possible non-invasive alternative to PGS and PGD |
Challenges for biochips for ARTs utilizing electric fields
Although automated miniaturized chips for the in vitro manipulation of cells and fluids possess numerous advantages, several challenges need to be overcome. When designing a microdevice utilizing electric fields for a biological application, one needs to take into consideration both the constraints stemming from the microfabrication processes and the requirements for the cell or medium of interest. Common issues associated with DEP devices are Joule heating, bubble formation, disrupted insulation and undesired reactions on the electrodes which may have a detrimental effect on the operation of the microchip. Furthermore, for successful DEP operation, a medium of low conductivity is required which adversely affects the viability of cells.86 The known challenges related to the EWOD technology are the contact angle saturation and hysteresis.149,150 Apart from these, the most common failure of the device is linked to electrolysis which can be observed as bubble formation within the chip. Low voltage EWOD is desirable, however, thinner insulators tend to break down upon applying an electric field. Another challenge in the construction of (D)MF chips handling biological samples are the changes of the surface properties due to the adsorption of molecules present in the culture medium.151,152 This problem can be overcome with the use of surfactants.153–155 However, these can be toxic to the different cell types or incompatible with the chip design. Evaporation of liquids which causes changes in the medium osmolarity is a separate issue which can negatively influence the in vitro development of mammalian embryos.156 Additionally, differences in the early embryonic development among mammalian species exist,157 so it seems reasonable to acknowledge other species as valuable models to decipher the paths involved in reproduction of mammals. Due to the ethical reasons concomitant with the culture of human embryos and stem cells, a regulation regarding the time of keeping these cells alive in in vitro culture was introduced. The so-called 14-day rule, only recently revised,158 constituted for a substantial restriction on the studies regarding the processes involved in the conception, embryo implantation and gestation. Due to the novelty of the proposed techniques in in vitro manipulation of gametes and embryos, a lack of standardization of protocols exists. The better the tools and more detailed the analysis of the cellular properties, the newer and more applicable models can be developed (as for example in120). More studies are necessary for the evaluation of the properties of these cells to draw a set of reference parameters for their in vitro handling. Such development is crucial for ARTs where the dominant method of the embryo and gamete assessment is based on the morphological grading. Lastly, the introduction of a novel apparatus exploiting phenomena such as DEP and EWOD requires training of personnel and a revision or adaptation of the existing protocols.
Concluding remarks and future perspectives
Electrically stimulated microchips can be applied in assisted reproductive technologies to better mimic the in vivo surroundings of gametes and embryos as well as to understand the complexity of the processes involved in the early embryonic development, implantation and pregnancy. DEP can potentially be used for positioning, selection and guidance of gametes, microchannels of specific geometry for their confinement, EWOD for dynamic culture, medium refreshment and embryo assessment, while other embedded sensors could serve as tools for real-time evaluation of the embryo microenvironment in vitro. Developments in the synthesis of materials to better mimic the in vivo cellular microenvironment, such as hydrogels, and their on-chip incorporation are expected due to the high demand and suitability upon creating complex organ-on-chips. Taking into consideration the above-mentioned aspects along with the rapid expansion of (digital) microfluidics and its application in assisted reproductive technologies, a prototype of the full IVF-on-chip can be expected in the near future.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts to declare.
Acknowledgements
This work was done in the frame of the project funded by Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek- Vlaanderen (FWO, project number G.0826.17N).
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