1 / 13

A Biaxial Cell Stretcher

A Biaxial Cell Stretcher. Client: Frank Yin, MD. Ph.D Group 30 Joshua Leibowitz Krista Vedvik Christopher Zarins. Background. Cells in the body experience mechanical forces Heart Lungs Blood vessels Laboratory cell cultures should recreate physiological conditions.

yvon
Download Presentation

A Biaxial Cell Stretcher

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Biaxial Cell Stretcher Client: Frank Yin, MD. Ph.D Group 30 Joshua Leibowitz Krista Vedvik Christopher Zarins

  2. Background • Cells in the body experience mechanical forces • Heart • Lungs • Blood vessels • Laboratory cell cultures should recreate physiological conditions

  3. Need for a Cell Stretcher • Studying the effects of mechanical force on aortic endothelial cells • Orientation and organization of cells depends on stretching • Controlling deformation in both directions gives the most accurate results

  4. Other Uses of Stretching • Cardiac—Induce alignment of stem cell derived cardiomyocytes (Tulloch, 2011) • Vascular—Study formation of aneurysms (Ventikos, 2010) • Respiratory—Study the effects of protein secretion (Arnold, 2006)

  5. Need for Biaxial Tests • Most current cell stretching experiments are uniaxial • Limits the validity of results

  6. Scope Design a device capable of applying 40% strain in two directions • Withstands incubator conditions (37˚C, 100% humidity) • Maintains calibration over a period of weeks • Easy access to medium to allow for additions and changes

  7. Current approaches Cell culture • Culture on an elastic membrane (Patten, 2005) • Culture imbedded in a pliable gel (Zile, 2006) Elastic membrane Adhesion Protein

  8. FlexCell system • Uses pressure to deform a circular membrane • Applies radial strain

  9. Calculations Taking E = 10 kPa, A0 = 1 cm2, L0 = 10 cm, ΔL = 4 cm, F = 4 N Required deflection force: Motor accuracy: Assuming 1.8˚ stepper motor resolution, drive mechanism must have at least 0.2 mm deflection per degree

  10. Design Schedule

  11. Member Responsibilities

  12. References • Arnold, S. P. et. al. Design of a New Stretching Apparatus and the Effects of Cyclic Strain and Substratum on Mouse Lung Epithelial-12 Cells. Ann Biomed Eng, 2007 35, 1156-1164 • Paten, J.A. et. al. Design and Performance of an Optically Accessible, Low-Volume, Mechanobioreactor for Long-Term Study of Living Constructs. Tis Eng, 2011 17 Part C • Tulloch, NL. et al. Growth of engineered human myocardium with mechanical loading and vascular coculture. Circ Res. 2011 Jun 4;109(1):47-59 • Ventikoset al. Modelling evolution and the evolving mechanical environment of saccular cerebral aneurysms. Biomech Model Mechanobiol2011 10:109-132 • Zile MR. et al. Gel stretch method: A new method to measure constitutive properties of cardiac muscle cells. Am J Physiol. 1998 Jun;274(6 Pt 2):h2188-202

  13. Questions?

More Related