Issue 1, 2019

Correlation of in vitro cell adhesion, local shear flow and cell density

Abstract

Investigating cell adhesion behavior on biocompatible surfaces under dynamic flow conditions is not only of scientific interest but also a principal step towards development of new medical implant materials. Driven by the improvement of the measurement technique for microfluidic flow fields (scanning particle image velocimetry, sPIV), a semi-automatic correlation of the local shear velocity and the cell detachment probability became possible. The functionality of customized software entitled ‘PIVDAC’ (Particle Image Velocimetry De-Adhesion Correlation) is demonstrated on the basis of detachment measurements using standard sand-blasted titanium implant material. A thermodynamic rate model is applied to describe the process of cell adhesion and detachment. A comparison of the model and our experimental findings, especially in a mild regime, where the shear flow does not simply tear away all cells from the substrate, demonstrates, as predicted, an increase of detachment rate with increasing shear force. Finally, we apply the method to compare experimentally obtained detachment rates under identical flow conditions as a function of cell density and find excellent agreement with previously reported model simulations that consider pure geometrical effects. The demonstrated method opens a wide field of applications to study various cell lines on novel substrates or in time dependent flow fields.

Graphical abstract: Correlation of in vitro cell adhesion, local shear flow and cell density

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Sep 2018
Accepted
15 Dec 2018
First published
02 Jan 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2019,9, 543-551

Correlation of in vitro cell adhesion, local shear flow and cell density

A. M. Jötten, S. Angermann, M. E. M. Stamp, D. Breyer, F. G. Strobl, A. Wixforth and C. Westerhausen, RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 543 DOI: 10.1039/C8RA07416J

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