A device for high-throughput monitoring of degradation in soft tissue samples

J Biomech. 2018 Jun 6:74:180-186. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2018.04.040. Epub 2018 May 3.

Abstract

This work describes the design and validation of a novel device, the High-Throughput Degradation Monitoring Device (HDD), for monitoring the degradation of 24 soft tissue samples over incubation periods of several days inside a cell culture incubator. The device quantifies sample degradation by monitoring its deformation induced by a static gravity load. Initial instrument design and experimental protocol development focused on quantifying cartilage degeneration. Characterization of measurement errors, caused mainly by thermal transients and by translating the instrument sensor, demonstrated that HDD can quantify sample degradation with <6 μm precision and <10 μm temperature-induced errors. HDD capabilities were evaluated in a pilot study that monitored the degradation of fresh ex vivo human cartilage samples by collagenase solutions over three days. HDD could robustly resolve the effects of collagenase concentration as small as 0.5 mg/ml. Careful sample preparation resulted in measurements that did not suffer from donor-to-donor variation (coefficient of variance <70%). Due to its unique combination of sample throughput, measurement precision, temporal sampling and experimental versality, HDD provides a novel biomechanics-based experimental platform for quantifying the effects of proteins (cytokines, growth factors, enzymes, antibodies) or small molecules on the degradation of soft tissues or tissue engineering constructs. Thereby, HDD can complement established tools and in vitro models in important applications including drug screening and biomaterial development.

Keywords: Cartilage degeneration; Extracellular matrix remodelling; High throughput screening; Mechanical testing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Cartilage / metabolism*
  • Collagenases / metabolism*
  • Equipment Design*
  • Femur / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Pilot Projects

Substances

  • Collagenases