The present invention relates to a three-dimensional thin film structure in which a microparticle is encapsulated inside a polymer thin film structure and a method for producing the same. In particular, the present invention relates to a tubular structure enabling isolated cultivation and transport operation of an adherent cell by encapsulating the adherent cell and a method for producing the same.
Priority is claimed on Japanese Patent Application No. 2016-103362, filed May 24, 2016, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Techniques for manipulating cells derived from living tissue at a single cell level are required not only for a fundamental research of cell biology but also for a wide range of fields such as regenerative medicine and drug discovery screening. Techniques for manipulating adherent cells such as epithelial cells, nerve cells, liver cells and the like constituting the tissues in a living body can be applied not only to cell sorting and analysis by a cell sorter, but also to construct pseudo three dimensional biological tissues by assembling cells in vitro. By constructing a pseudo three dimensional biological tissue, it is possible to conduct the dynamic analysis of a target living tissue and a susceptibility test to a drug, and to further prepare a carrier for organ reconstruction and cell transplantation.
In the past, it has been possible to select and recover individual cells of suspended (non-adherent) cells such as blood cells relatively easily by operating techniques of micropipettes, microfluidic devices and the like because of their floating characteristics. On the other hand, because of the property that adherent cells cannot grow unless being adhered to each other or to a culture substrate, it is usual to manipulate them after chemically releasing the cells once with an enzyme such as trypsin, or physically destroy the adhesion between the cells and the substrate to liberate them. However, it has been difficult to observe and analyze the intrinsic activity of the cells because loss of the cell membrane surface marker, disruption of the skeletal system, and cell death are induced by these chemically or physically liberating operations. Therefore, it has been essential to establish an operating method that enables an operation while maintaining the adhesion state of the cells, with lesser damage to the cells.
In recent years, attention has been paid to a technique for manufacturing a minute dynamic substrate onto which adherent cells can be adhered using a microfabrication technique, and culturing and manipulating the cells on the surface thereof (Non-Patent Document 1). Using a self-assembling force to fabricate a tubular structure and adhering cells inside it, it became possible to manipulate in a state where the adhesiveness of cells was maintained. In addition, it became possible to observe the behavior of cells under a three-dimensional environment like a tissue (Non-Patent Document 2). The tubular structure as described above is fabricated using a microfabrication process such as a photolithography technique. Therefore, in general, thin films of inorganic substances such as metals and silicon compounds formed by crystal growth or vapor deposition are used for the material of the substrate and the material of the sacrificial layer used for liberating the substrate. In such a thin film of an inorganic substance, thin film layers composed of plural kinds of elements make up a structure in which they are in close contact with each other in the thin film. Therefore, a stress distribution occurs in the planar film due to the gradient of the lattice constant in the thickness direction, and the thin film is bent to form a three-dimensional shape.
However, since a metal thin film generally has low biocompatibility, it is difficult to bring cells into contact therewith for a long period of time, and it is not suitable as an adhesive substrate for cells. In addition, since an etching solution with high cytotoxicity is used in the manufacturing process and lift-off process, it is necessary to thoroughly clean the substrate after fabrication of the three-dimensional structure, and after washing, the cells are introduced inside. Therefore, it is difficult to operate in a state where the substrate is isolated. In addition, since introduction of cells into the inside of the tubular structure depends on accidental entry of cells into the inside of the tubular structure, there was a problem that the success rate of cell encapsulation is low.
In view of the above circumstances, an object of the present invention is to provide a three-dimensional thin film structure having a high efficiency of introducing microparticles such as cells and capable of culturing cells or the like in an internal space thereof for a long period of time.
The present invention includes the following aspects.
(1) A three-dimensional structure which is composed of a polymer film having a plurality of layers,
wherein a microparticle is encapsulated in an internal space of the three-dimensional structure, and each layer of the polymer film having the plurality of layers has mechanical strengths different from each other.
(2) The three-dimensional structure according to (1),
wherein each layer of the polymer film having the plurality of layers is composed of a polymer material having swelling ratios different from each other.
(3) The three-dimensional structure according to (1) or (2),
wherein a layer in contact with an outside of the three-dimensional structure among the layers of the polymer film having the plurality of layers is composed of a polymer material having the largest swelling ratio.
(4) The three-dimensional structure according to any one of (1) to (3),
wherein each layer of the polymer film having the plurality of layers is composed of a polymer material exhibiting high biocompatibility.
(5) The three-dimensional structure according to any one of (1) to (4), wherein the microparticle is a cell.
(6) The three-dimensional structure according to any one of (1) to (5), further including a layer composed of an extracellular matrix on a surface of the polymer film.
(7) The three-dimensional structure according to any one of (1) to (6), wherein the polymer film has a thickness of 15 to 400 nm.
(8) The three-dimensional structure according to any one of (5) to (7),
wherein the cell is an adherent cell and is adhered to the polymer film.
(9) The three-dimensional structure according to any one of (5) to (8),
wherein the three-dimensional structure has a biological tissue-like structure, and the cell forms a cell aggregate of a biological tissue-like structure.
(10) A biological tissue-like structure including the three-dimensional structure according to any one of (5) to (9) and a cell existing outside the three-dimensional structure,
wherein a cell encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure forms a structure extending to the outside of the three-dimensional structure, and an intercellular interaction is able to occur between the cell encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure and the cell existing outside the three-dimensional structure.
(11) A method for producing a three-dimensional structure encapsulating a microparticle, the method including the steps of:
(a) forming a polymer film having a plurality of layers;
(b) floating the microparticle over a surface of the polymer film having the plurality of layers; and
(c) generating a stress distribution in a thickness direction in the polymer film having the plurality of layers to make the polymer film having the plurality of layers form a three-dimensional structure in a self-assembling manner.
(12) The method for producing a three-dimensional structure according to (11), further including a step of forming a sacrificial layer on a substrate,
wherein the step (a) is a step of laminating polymer materials having swelling ratios different from each other on the sacrificial layer to form a polymer film having a plurality layers;
the step (b) is a step of adding a suspension containing the microparticle to the polymer film having the plurality layers,
and the step (c) is a step of decomposing the sacrificial layer, thereby releasing the polymer film from the substrate.
(13) The method for producing a three-dimensional structure according to (11) or (12), wherein the microparticle is a cell.
(14) The method for producing a three-dimensional structure according to any one of (11) to (13), further including a step of forming a layer composed of an extracellular matrix on a surface of the polymer film.
(15) The method for producing a three-dimensional structure according to any one of (11) to (14), wherein the polymer film has a thickness of 15 to 400 nm.
(16) A laminate including:
a substrate;
a sacrificial layer laminated on the substrate; and
a polymer film having a plurality of layers laminated on the sacrificial layer,
wherein each layer of the polymer film having the plurality of layers is composed of a polymer material that may generate a stress distribution in a thickness direction in the polymer film when the polymer film is released from the substrate by decomposing the sacrificial layer.
(17) The laminate according to (16),
wherein each layer of the polymer film having the plurality of layers is composed of a polymer material having swelling ratios different from each other.
(18) The laminate according to (16) or (17), further including a layer composed of an extracellular matrix laminated on the polymer film.
(19) The laminate according to any one of (16) to (18), wherein the polymer film has a thickness of 15 to 400 nm.
According to the present invention, there are provided a three-dimensional thin film structure having a high efficiency of introducing microparticles such as cells and capable of culturing cells and the like in an internal space thereof for a long period of time and a method for manufacturing the same.
A three-dimensional structure of the present invention is a three-dimensional structure formed by encapsulating a microparticle in an internal space of a three-dimensional structure composed of a polymer film having a plurality of layer. Further, in one aspect, the three-dimensional structure of the present invention is a three-dimensional structure composed of a polymer film having a plurality of layers, wherein a microparticle is encapsulated in an internal space of the aforementioned three-dimensional structure, and each layer of the aforementioned polymer film having the plurality of layers has mechanical strengths different from each other. Hereinafter, the three-dimensional structure of the present invention will be described with reference to drawings showing a preferred aspect of the present invention.
As shown in
As shown in
The thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11 constituting the thin film 1 are composed of a highly biocompatible polymer material. The polymer materials constituting the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11 are not particularly limited as long as those exhibit high biocompatibility, and any of a synthetic polymer and a biopolymer can be used. Examples of the synthetic polymer include polyethylene glycol (PEG), polyacrylamide, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), (3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)/poly(4-styrenesulfonic acid) (PEDOT-PSS), polypyrrole-based polymers, polyaniline-based polymers and polyparaxylene (parylene). Examples of the biopolymer include polysaccharides; proteins such as gelatin and silk fibroin; and extracellular matrices such as chitosan and collagen.
Further, for the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11, a polymer material with high transparency may be used. If a polymer material having high transparency is used for the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11, since the optical path is not blocked at the time of observation with a microscope, observation inside the structure becomes possible in any type of microscope regardless of upright type or inverted type. In addition, if a super-resolution microscope is used, it is also possible to observe the behavior of finer cells and the activity of proteins in cells with fluorescence. When the microparticle 20 is adherent cells, it is preferable to use a cell adhesive polymer material for the thin film layer 11.
The thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11 have different mechanical strengths from each other. Examples of the mechanical strengths include, for example, elastic modulus. Therefore, it is preferable to form the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11 using polymer materials having swelling ratios different from each other. For example, when the three-dimensional structure 100 is a tubular structure, it is preferable to use a material having a large swelling ratio for the thin film layer 10 and a material having a small swelling ratio for the thin film layer 11. Examples of combinations of such thin film layers include, for example, one in which the thin film layer 10 is composed of a silk fibroin gel and the thin film layer 11 is composed of parylene, and the like. The present invention is not limited to this example, and conversely, it is possible to use a material having a small swelling ratio for the thin film layer 10 and a material having a large swelling ratio for the thin film layer 11. Further, also in the case where the thin film 1 is constituted of three or more thin film layers, each thin film layer is preferably composed of a polymer material having swelling ratios different from each other.
The thickness of the thin film 1 formed by a plurality of thin film layers is not particularly limited, but it is preferable to set the thickness to such a level that the permeability of oxygen or substance to the internal space of the three-dimensional structure is not prevented. For example, the thickness of the thin film 1 can be set preferably from 15 to 400 nm, more preferably from 20 to 300 nm, and still more preferably from 20 to 200 nm. In this case, a cell with a diameter of 10 μm scale can be suitably encapsulated, and bending of the thin film 1 is not prevented. In order to set the thickness of the thin film 1 as described above, for example, the thickness of the thin film layer 10 can be set preferably from 10 to 350 nm, more preferably from 15 to 250 nm, and still more preferably from 50 to 200 nm, and the thickness of the layer 11 can be set preferably from 5 to 200 nm, more preferably from 10 to 150 nm, and still more preferably from 20 to 100 nm.
Further, the surface of the thin film 1 may be formed with an arbitrary two-dimensional plane pattern. For example, an arbitrary two-dimensional shape can be formed by patterning using a lithography technique. The size of the pattern is preferably 50 μm or more. For example, a pattern of an arbitrary two-dimensional shape may be formed on the surface of the thin film 1 depending on the type of cells and the number of cells to be encapsulated. Further, in the case where a cell is encapsulated as the microparticle 20 in the three-dimensional structure 100, depending on the type of the cells, a pattern may be formed on the surface of the thin film 1 so that the shape of the internal space of the three-dimensional structure 100 becomes a biological tissue-like structure. For example, a pattern can be formed on the surface of the thin film 1 so as to configure a shape of an internal space simulating a biological tissue such as a hollow vascular tissue composed of epithelial cells or a fibrous nerve tissue.
The microparticle 20 to be encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure 100 is not particularly limited as long as it is a fine particle having a size of 1 μm or less. Examples of the microparticle 20 include plant and animal cells, bacteria, parasite bodies, microbeads, microbubbles, spherical lipid bilayer membranes (liposomes) and nanoparticles. Among the plant and animal cells, preferable examples include adherent cells, and the like. Examples of the adherent cells include, but are not limited to, nerve cells, cardiac myocytes, and the like.
In the embodiment shown in
The amount of the microparticles 20 to be encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure 100 is not particularly limited, and an appropriate amount can be suitably encapsulated in accordance with the application. When the microparticles 20 are cells, the cells encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure 100 grow according to the shape of the internal space of the three-dimensional structure 100. Therefore, by making the shape of the internal space of the three-dimensional structure 100 as a biological tissue-like structure, the encapsulated cells proliferate to form a biological tissue-like structure. In the three-dimensional structure of the present invention, since the thin film constituting the three-dimensional structure is formed of a polymer material having high biocompatibility, it is possible to culture cells for a long period of time.
Further, when the three-dimensional structure 100 in which cells are encapsulated as the microparticles 20 is moved onto the culture substrate where the cells have been previously cultured, and is cultured, cell processes, axons, cell bodies and the like are extended from the inside of the three-dimensional structure 100 to the outside of the three-dimensional structure 100. Intercellular interactions can occur between the cells encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure 100 and the cells existing outside the three-dimensional structure via structures of these cell processes, axons, cell bodies and the like.
The three-dimensional structure of the present invention is different from the conventional thin film three-dimensional structure from the viewpoints that: (i) the constituting thin film is composed of a highly biocompatible polymer material; (ii) since cells can be cultured on the thin film, the cultured cells can be encapsulated in the three-dimensional thin film structure in a self-assembling manner; and (iii) when encapsulating cells, the encapsulated cells can function as a biological tissue.
As described above, in the three-dimensional structure of the present invention, when cells are encapsulated, the encapsulated cells can function as a biological tissue, and a biological tissue-like structure can be formed by the encapsulated cells. Cells inside the three-dimensional structure can also interact with cells outside the three-dimensional structure. For this reason, the three-dimensional structure encapsulating cells can be applied, as a biological tissue-like structure, to transplanted tissues (grafts) for repairing nerve tissues such as epilepsy and spinal cord injuries, transplanted tissues (grafts) for repairing myocardial tissues damaged by myocardial infarction, and the like. Moreover, it can be applied to drug screening or the like as a pseudo biological tissue to test the drug response. In addition, by designing a three-dimensional structure having a bent hinge structure, it is also possible to obtain a three-dimensional structure that realizes capture of a target cell, adsorption to a tissue surface of a target cell, an actuator function for holding a target cell, or the like. Furthermore, the three-dimensional structure of the present invention can also be applied as an element for an in vivo implantable device.
The three-dimensional structure of the present invention is composed of a polymer materials. Due to its low rigidity, although it is possible to form a thin film, it is difficult for the polymer material to process the formed thin film or to form an intensity distribution. Therefore, there are still few reports on techniques for fabricating three-dimensional shapes using polymer thin films.
Accordingly, in the present invention, a phenomenon in which the polymer thin film is assembled into a three-dimensional shape in a self-assembling manner, by forming a polymer thin film composed of a plurality of layers using a lithographic technique or the like and creating a structure that generates a stress distribution in the thickness direction inside the polymer thin film, is utilized. That is, one aspect of the present invention is a method for producing a three-dimensional structure encapsulating a microparticle, the method including: a step of forming a polymer film having a plurality of layers; a step of floating the microparticle over a surface of the aforementioned polymer film having the plurality of layers; and a step of generating a stress distribution in the thickness direction in the aforementioned polymer film having the plurality of layers to form a three-dimensional structure in a self-assembling manner in the aforementioned polymer film having the plurality of layers. Hereinafter, the method for producing a three-dimensional structure of the present invention will be described with reference to drawings showing a preferred aspect of the present invention.
In the structure illustrated in
Next, one aspect of the method for producing a three-dimensional structure of the present invention will be described with reference to
In the embodiment shown in
The material of the substrate 13 is not particularly limited, but it is preferable to use a material having high surface flatness. Further, when observing the three-dimensional structure 100 encapsulating a cell on the substrate 13 with a fluorescence microscope, it is preferable to use a material which does not hinder the fluorescence intensity of the cell by the fluorescence microscope. Moreover, it is preferable that the wavelength absorption bands in a spectrophotometer and an infrared spectrometer do not overlap with those of the thin film layer 10. Examples of such materials include, for example, silicon, soda glass, quartz, magnesium oxide and sapphire. It should be noted that in the examples of
The thickness of the substrate 13 is not particularly limited, and can be set to, for example, 50 to 200 μm. Further, the surface of the substrate 13 may be modified with PEG, 2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (MPC) polymer or the like for the purpose of suppressing nonspecific adsorption of a cell.
The material of the sacrificial layer 12 is not particularly limited, but it is preferable to use a physical gel capable of undergoing sol-gel transition. It is also preferable that the solution or the stimulus such as light used for sol-gel transition does not exhibit cytotoxicity. Examples of such gels include gels decomposed by changes in light, heat, pH and the like. Specific examples thereof include poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM), azobenzene-modified polymer gels, and the like. In addition, gels which are decomposed by the action of chelating agents, enzymes or the like can also be used. As such a gel, for example, a calcium alginate gel and the like can be mentioned. It should be noted that in the examples shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
By using polymer materials having different swelling ratios for the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11 as described above, when immersed in a solution, a difference in the volume change due to swelling occurs between the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11, and a stress distribution is generated in the thickness direction. This stress distribution serves as a driving force, and when the sacrificial layer 12 is decomposed and the thin film 1 is released from the substrate 13 in a later step, the thin film 1 forms a three-dimensional shape in a self-assembling manner.
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
By decomposing the sacrificial layer 12 as described above, the thin film 1 is released from the substrate 13 as shown in
By decomposing the sacrificial layer 12 by a stimulus that has no cytotoxicity, even when a cell is used as the microparticle 20, it becomes possible to add the cell onto the thin film 1 immediately before decomposition operation of the sacrificial layer 12. At this time, by changing the cell concentration of the cell suspension on the thin film 1, it is possible to control the number of cells encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure. Further, since the cells are encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure simultaneously with the assembly of the three-dimensional structure, a large number of cells can be collectively encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure. Therefore, as compared with the conventional method that relies on accidental entry of cells into the three-dimensional structure, the introduction efficiency of cells into the three-dimensional structure can be remarkably improved.
Although the embodiments of the present invention have been described above in detail with reference to the drawings, the specific configuration is not limited to these embodiments, and other designs and the like are also included insofar as they do not depart from the spirit or scope of the present invention.
Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in more detail with reference to specific examples. However, the present invention is not limited in any way by the following examples.
Fabrication of a thin film capable of self-assembling into a three-dimensional structure was carried out according to the process shown in
Next, a thin film layer 10 was formed on the sacrificial layer 12. As a gel constituting the thin film layer 10, a silk fibroin gel was used. Silk fibroin was dissolved in water for use and filtered to remove molecules larger than 200 nm. The silk fibroin solution prepared as described above was spin-coated on the surface of the sacrificial layer 12, followed by immersion into a methanol solution to thereby form a thin film layer 10 composed of a silk fibroin gel (
Next, a thin film layer 11 was formed on the thin film layer 10. On the surface of the thin film layer 10, a dimer of paraxylene was grown by CVD to thereby form a thin film layer 11 composed of a parylene thin film (
Next, a positive type photoresist (S1813) was spin-coated on the thin film layer 11 and irradiated with ultraviolet light through a photomask, thereby patterning a physical mask on the thin film layer 11 (
Self-assembly of a three-dimensional structure encapsulating cells was performed according to the process shown in
Next, a chelating agent was added to dissolve a calcium alginate gel layer of the sacrificial layer 12 (
When the sacrificial layer 12 was dissolved by the addition of the EDTA solution, the thin film 1 was released from the substrate 13, and self-assembly into a tubular structure occurred (
The time from the addition of the EDTA solution to the completion of the tubular structure can be controlled by the final concentration of the EDTA solution to be added and the type of the solution in which the substrate was immersed. In the present example, by immersing the sacrificial layer 12 composed of a calcium alginate gel having a length of 200 μm, a width of 400 μm and a thickness of 40 nm in 200 μL of pure water and adding a 0.5 M EDTA solution, it was possible to remove the sacrificial layer 12 within about 20 seconds (
Since the bending phenomenon of the thin film 1 is caused by the stress distribution in the thickness direction of the thin film 1, by changing the volumes of the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11 constituting the thin film 1, the curvature at the time of bending the thin film 1 can be controlled.
The tubular structure produced as described above is completely separated from the substrate 13. This enables handling such as collection and transfer by pipetting. Furthermore, it is also possible to bring a plurality of tubular structures close to each other by using a glass capillary. Therefore, a tubular structure encapsulating cells is used as a graft, and it can be applied to transportation or transplantation to a target living tissue or the like.
In the present example, Chinese hamster ovary-derived (CHO) cells and human embryonic kidney-derived (HEK) cells, which were cultured cells of established cell lines, were used as cells to be encapsulated in the tubular structure. Both cells were cultured using a Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (DMEM) containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) as a culture medium. Both cells were cultured in a humid environment in which the temperature was kept at 37° C. and the carbon dioxide concentration was maintained at 5%.
Preparation of the tubular structure and encapsulation of the cells were carried out as in Example 1 and Example 2. After one week from encapsulation into the tubular structure, viability of the cells were evaluated, and survival of both CHO cells and HEK cells in the tubular structure was confirmed. Further, in the CHO cells and the HEK cells which are cultured cells of established cell lines that grow repeatedly and endlessly, it was observed that the inside of the space of the tubular structure was filled with cells along with the cell proliferation, thereby forming cell aggregates. In addition, depending on the type of cells, the structure of the formed cell aggregate was different. In the CHO cells, the cells adhered only to the surface of the thin film layer 11 and showed a biological tissue-like structure with a hollow structure (
In addition, based on the tubular structure of the present example, it is also possible to produce a longer biological tissue-like structure by making the major axis direction longer. The tubular structure shown in
In the present example, cell bodies were encapsulated inside the tubular structure during the culture period, and it was possible to manipulate while maintaining that state. In addition, in the thin film 1 encapsulating the cells, the three-dimensional shape did not collapse even when the culture was continued at 37° C. in the DMEM medium. With the use of a glass capillary, cell aggregates encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure can be moved to the x-y plane without changing the three-dimensional structure, and transplantation to places where different cell groups were present was also possible while the cells were encapsulated in the three-dimensional structure. Furthermore, it was confirmed that the cell aggregates could be rotated in the minor axis direction while being encapsulated in the tubular structure, the angle (inclination) on the z axis could be controlled, and it can also be applied to multi-angle observation of cells.
In the present example, hippocampal cells and cerebral cortical cell which were primary neurons isolated from a rat brain tissue were used. As shown in
Since primary cerebral cortical cells and hippocampal cells have slow cell growth rates, the cells could be cultured for a longer period of time of 1 month or more, as compared with the cultured cells of established cell lines, without the cells being protruded from the tubular structure. In addition, since primary neurons extend nerve axons for neurotransmission, it was also confirmed that the cells form cell aggregates inside the tubular structure and then extend the nerve axons to the outside of the tubular structure. In the present example, since the three-dimensional structure was cylindrical and only the two end points thereof were open to the culture medium space, the nerve axons were extended from the end points to the outside of the tubular structure. This indicates that the three-dimensional structure of this example encapsulating the primary neurons not only enables assembly of a nerve tissue-like microstructure but also enables application as an electrical wiring element to transmit electrical signals of the cells unidirectionally in the major axis direction.
It was possible to move the nerve tissue-like cell aggregate of the present example without disrupting the tissue by handling the tubular structure. It was confirmed from the phase contrast microscope image (
In the primary neurons, there is a difference in ion concentration between the inside and the outside of the cell membrane, and the inside of the membrane is negatively polarized in a stationary state. Since cells have a function of regulating the opening and closing of ion conduction pores according to changes in biomembrane potential, by inducing cell depolarization using a potassium chloride (KCl) solution, it is possible to forcibly activate the voltage-dependent calcium ion channel and allow calcium ions to flow into the cell. Accordingly, after encapsulating and incubating the primary neurons in the tubular structure, a KCl solution was added to induce depolarization. As a result, it was demonstrated that not only nerve cells existing outside the tubular structure but also cells encapsulated in the tubular structure can be stimulated. Furthermore, calcium was labeled with a calcium fluorescent probe Fluo-4, and the permeation of calcium ions in the extracellular fluid into the cell was observed with a confocal microscope. As a result of adding a KCl solution and stimulating the cells, as shown in
In the present example, primary cardiac myocytes isolated from a rat cardiac tissue were used. As shown in
In the cardiac myocytes, it was confirmed that during the culture period of one month or more, stable cell aggregate morphology was maintained inside the tubular structure, and the cell death was not induced inside the tubular structure. As shown in
As in the case of primary neurons, in the cardiac myocytes, there is a difference in ion concentration between the inside and the outside of the cell membrane, and the inside of the membrane is negatively polarized in a stationary state. Cells have a function of regulating the opening and closing of ion conduction pores according to changes in biomembrane potential. It is known that the beating of myocardial tissue causes calcium ions to flow into the cell when the cell receives an electrical signal. Accordingly, calcium was labeled with a calcium fluorescent probe Fluo-4, and the permeation of calcium ions in the myocardial extracellular fluid into the cardiac myocytes was observed with a fluorescence microscope. As shown in
It was confirmed that not only rectangular thin films are self-assembled into tubular structures but also various three dimensional structures can be produced by arbitrarily determining the two-dimensional shape of thin films.
In Example 2, it was confirmed that the thin film 1 can be assembled into a three-dimensional shape in a self-assembling manner using the strain distribution due to buckling in the in-plane direction caused by the difference in mechanical strength between the thin film layer 10 and the thin film layer 11. Furthermore, it was found that the curvature radius of the tubular structure in a steady state after completion of self-assembly depends only on the ratio of thickness and the ratio of mechanical strength between the two thin film layers.
Since the tubular structure of the present example has mobility, it can be placed on a microelectrode array (MEA) substrate that measures existing extracellular potential by controlling the position with a capillary, and can be applied to highly efficient measurement of extracellular potential of any cell at any time.
According to the present invention, since cells are encapsulated in a thin film three-dimensional structure formed of a soft material exhibiting high biocompatibility, it becomes possible to produce biological devices and artificial tissues exhibiting high biocompatibility. The present invention can be used in the overall field of using biological tissue-like structures including regenerative medicine technology and drug screening. In addition, the present invention can also be applied to body implantable device elements and extracellular potential measuring elements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2016-103362 | May 2016 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2017/019302 | 5/24/2017 | WO | 00 |