HUVECs-encapsulation via Millimeter-sized Alginate Droplets
Khanh Tran, Brenda A.A.B. Ametepe, Erika L. Gomez, Daniel Ramos, Clare, Kim, Ga-Young Kelly Suh, Siavash Ahrar, Perla Ayala

TL;DR
This paper presents a simple microfluidic method to produce millimeter-sized alginate droplets for cell encapsulation, enabling applications in tissue engineering and cell therapies, demonstrated through a HUVEC-encapsulation healing assay.
Contribution
It introduces a novel microfluidic device with a hydrophobic acrylic layer for tunable generation of millimeter-sized alginate droplets for cell encapsulation.
Findings
Successfully generated tunable millimeter-sized alginate droplets.
Achieved uniform droplets with low coefficient of variance (~5%).
Demonstrated effective cell encapsulation in a healing assay.
Abstract
Droplet microfluidics are a powerful approach for hydrogel cell encapsulations. Much of the field has focused on single-cell encapsulations with pico-nanoliter droplet volumes necessary for single-cell sequencing or high-throughput screening. These small volumes, however, limit the use of hydrogel droplets for tissue engineering or cell therapies. We describe simple droplet microfluidics to generate millimeter-sized alginate droplets and demonstrate their use for cell encapsulations. This effort builds on our recent efforts, specifically by replacing the glass slide forming the bottom layer of the chamber with a more hydrophobic acrylic (PMMA) layer to improve the alginate-in-oil droplet formation. Using glass layer and PMMA layer devices, we characterized the tunable production of water-in-oil droplets (average droplet lengths ranged from 0.8 to 3.7 mm). Next, PMMA layer devices were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques Innovation · Electrowetting and Microfluidic Technologies · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
