Incorporating mechanical strain in organs-on-a-chip: Lung and skin

Biomicrofluidics. 2018 May 21;12(4):042207. doi: 10.1063/1.5024895. eCollection 2018 Jul.

Abstract

In the last decade, the advent of microfabrication and microfluidics and an increased interest in cellular mechanobiology have triggered the development of novel microfluidic-based platforms. They aim to incorporate the mechanical strain environment that acts upon tissues and in-vivo barriers of the human body. This article reviews those platforms, highlighting the different strains applied, and the actuation mechanisms and provides representative applications. A focus is placed on the skin and the lung barriers as examples, with a section that discusses the signaling pathways involved in the epithelium and the connective tissues.