A passive pump-assisted microfluidic assay for quantifying endothelial wound healing in response to fluid shear stress

Electrophoresis. 2022 Nov;43(21-22):2195-2205. doi: 10.1002/elps.202200104. Epub 2022 Aug 9.

Abstract

There as an urgent need to quantify the endothelial wound-healing process in response to fluid shear stress to improve the biological and clinical understanding of healing mechanisms, which is of great importance for preventing healing impairment, chronic wounds, and postoperative in-stent restenosis. However, current experimental platforms not only require expensive, cumbersome, and powered pumping devices (to, e.g., generate cell scratches and load shear stress stimulation) but also lack quantitative controls for quantitative analysis. In this paper, a passive pump-assisted microfluidic assay is developed to quantify endothelial wound healing in response to fluid shear stress. Our assay consists of passive constant-flow pumps based on the siphon principle and a three-inlet microfluidic chip for cell wound-healing experiments. We also propose a method for quantitatively adjusting cell scratch size by controlling trypsin flow. Both numerical simulations and fluorescein experiments validate the effectiveness of this method. Moreover, we use the designed microfluidic assay to successfully generate cell scratches, load a 12-h shear stress of 5 dyn/cm2 to the cells, and observe wound healing. The results indicate that the healing of a cell scratch is significantly accelerated under the stimulation of shear stress. In conclusion, our passive pump-assisted microfluidic assay shows versatility, applicability, and the potential for quantifying endothelial wound healing in response to fluid shear stress.

Keywords: endothelial wound healing; microfluidics; passive pump; quantitative control of cell scratch size; shear stress.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Endothelium, Vascular
  • Microfluidics*
  • Stress, Mechanical
  • Wound Healing* / physiology