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H-FIBER: Microfluidic Topographical Hollow Fiber for Studies of Glomerular Filtration Barrier.


ABSTRACT: Kidney-on-a-chip devices may revolutionize the discovery of new therapies. However, fabricating a 3D glomerulus remains a challenge, due to a requirement for a microscale soft material with complex topography to support cell culture in a native configuration. Here, we describe the use of microfluidic spinning to recapitulate complex concave and convex topographies over multiple length scales, required for biofabrication of a biomimetic 3D glomerulus. We produced a microfluidic extruded topographic hollow fiber (h-FIBER), consisting of a vessel-like perfusable tubular channel for endothelial cell cultivation, and a glomerulus-like knot with microconvex topography on its surface for podocyte cultivation. Meter long h-FIBERs were produced in microfluidics within minutes, followed by chemically induced inflation for generation of topographical cues on the 3D scaffold surface. The h-FIBERs were assembled into a hot-embossed plastic 96-well plate. Long-term perfusion, podocyte barrier formation, endothelialization, and permeability tests were easily performed by a standard pipetting technique on the platform. Following long-term culture (1 month), a functional filtration barrier, measured by the transfer of albumin from the blood vessel side to the ultrafiltrate side, suggested the establishment of an engineered glomerulus.

SUBMITTER: Xie R 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7318083 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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h-FIBER: Microfluidic Topographical Hollow Fiber for Studies of Glomerular Filtration Barrier.

Xie Ruoxiao R   Korolj Anastasia A   Liu Chuan C   Song Xin X   Lu Rick Xing Ze RXZ   Zhang Boyang B   Ramachandran Arun A   Liang Qionglin Q   Radisic Milica M  

ACS central science 20200513 6


Kidney-on-a-chip devices may revolutionize the discovery of new therapies. However, fabricating a 3D glomerulus remains a challenge, due to a requirement for a microscale soft material with complex topography to support cell culture in a native configuration. Here, we describe the use of microfluidic spinning to recapitulate complex concave and convex topographies over multiple length scales, required for biofabrication of a biomimetic 3D glomerulus. We produced a microfluidic extruded topograph  ...[more]

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