Spontaneous
Packaging and Hypothermic Storage of Mammalian Cells with a Cell-Membrane-Mimetic
Polymer Hydrogel in a Microchip
Posted on 2015-10-21 - 00:00
Currently,
continuous culture/passage and cryopreservation are two major, well-established
methods to provide cultivated mammalian cells for experiments in laboratories.
Due to the lack of flexibility, however, both laboratory-oriented
methods are unable to meet the need for rapidly growing cell-based
applications, which require cell supply in a variety of occasions
outside of laboratories. Herein, we report spontaneous packaging and
hypothermic storage of mammalian cells under refrigerated (4 °C)
and ambient conditions (25 °C) using a cell-membrane-mimetic
methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (MPC) polymer hydrogel incorporated
within a glass microchip. Its capability for hypothermic storage of
cells was comparatively evaluated over 16 days. The results reveal
that the cytocompatible MPC polymer hydrogel, in combination with
the microchip structure, enabled hypothermic storage of cells with
quite high viability, high intracellular esterase activity, maintained
cell membrane integrity, and small morphological change for more than
1 week at 4 °C and at least 4 days at 25 °C. Furthermore,
the stored cells could be released from the hydrogel and exhibited
the ability to adhere to a surface and achieve confluence under standard
cell culture conditions. Both hypothermic storage conditions are ordinary
flexible conditions which can be easily established in places outside
of laboratories. Therefore, cell packaging and storage using the hydrogel
incorporated within the microchip would be a promising miniature and
portable solution for flexible supply and delivery of small amounts
of cells from bench to bedside.
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Xu, Yan; Mawatari, Kazuma; Konno, Tomohiro; Kitamori, Takehiko; Ishihara, Kazuhiko (2016). Spontaneous
Packaging and Hypothermic Storage of Mammalian Cells with a Cell-Membrane-Mimetic
Polymer Hydrogel in a Microchip. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.5b06796