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Quantitative and Temporal Control of Oxygen Microenvironment at the Single Islet Level
Authors:Joe Fu-Jiou Lo  Yong Wang  Zidong Li  Zhengtuo Zhao  Di Hu  David T. Eddington  Jose Oberholzer
Affiliation:1.Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan-Dearborn;2.Department of Surgery/Transplant, University of Illinois at Chicago;3.Department of Bioengineering, University of Illinois at Chicago
Abstract:
Simultaneous oxygenation and monitoring of glucose stimulus-secretion coupling factors in a single technique is critical for modeling pathophysiological states of islet hypoxia, especially in transplant environments. Standard hypoxic chamber techniques cannot modulate both stimulations at the same time nor provide real-time monitoring of glucose stimulus-secretion coupling factors. To address these difficulties, we applied a multilayered microfluidic technique to integrate both aqueous and gas phase modulations via a diffusion membrane. This creates a stimulation sandwich around the microscaled islets within the transparent polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) device, enabling monitoring of the aforementioned coupling factors via fluorescence microscopy. Additionally, the gas input is controlled by a pair of microdispensers, providing quantitative, sub-minute modulations of oxygen between 0-21%. This intermittent hypoxia is applied to investigate a new phenomenon of islet preconditioning. Moreover, armed with multimodal microscopy, we were able to look at detailed calcium and KATP channel dynamics during these hypoxic events. We envision microfluidic hypoxia, especially this simultaneous dual phase technique, as a valuable tool in studying islets as well as many ex vivo tissues.
Keywords:Bioengineering   Issue 81   Islets of Langerhans   Microfluidics   Microfluidic Analytical Techniques   Microfluidic Analytical Techniques   oxygen   islet   hypoxia   intermittent hypoxia
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