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Human Lung Small Airway-on-a-Chip Protocol

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Part of the book series: Methods in Molecular Biology ((MIMB,volume 1612))

Abstract

Organs-on-chips are microfluidic cell culture devices created using microchip manufacturing techniques that contain hollow microchannels lined by living cells, which recreate specialized tissue–tissue interfaces, physical microenvironments, and vascular perfusion necessary to recapitulate organ-level physiology in vitro. Here we describe a protocol for fabrication, culture, and operation of a human lung “small airway-on-a-chip,” which contains a differentiated, mucociliary bronchiolar epithelium exposed to air and an underlying microvascular endothelium that experiences fluid flow. First, microengineering is used to fabricate a multilayered microfluidic device that contains two parallel elastomeric microchannels separated by a thin rigid porous membrane; this requires less than 1 day to complete. Next, primary human airway bronchiolar epithelial cells isolated from healthy normal donors or patients with respiratory disease are cultured on the porous membrane within one microchannel while lung microvascular endothelial cells are cultured on the opposite side of the same membrane in the second channel to create a mucociliated epithelium–endothelium interface; this process take about 4–6 weeks to complete. Finally, culture medium containing neutrophils isolated from fresh whole human blood are flowed through the microvascular channel of the device to enable real-time analysis of capture and recruitment of circulating leukocytes by endothelium under physiological shear; this step requires less than 1 day to complete. The small airway-on-a-chip represents a new microfluidic tool to model complex and dynamic inflammatory responses of healthy and diseased lungs in vitro.

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Acknowledgments

We thank C. Lucchesi, J. Szabo, R. Villenave, C.D. Hinojosa, and G. Thompson for technical assistance, learning to use instruments and helpful discussions. We also thank the Wyss Microfabrication Team for their help with chip fabrication.

Potential competing interests

D.E. Ingber holds equity in Emulate, Inc. and Opsonix, Inc. and chairs their scientific advisory boards.

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Correspondence to Donald E. Ingber .

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Benam, K.H., Mazur, M., Choe, Y., Ferrante, T.C., Novak, R., Ingber, D.E. (2017). Human Lung Small Airway-on-a-Chip Protocol. In: Koledova, Z. (eds) 3D Cell Culture. Methods in Molecular Biology, vol 1612. Humana Press, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7021-6_25

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7021-6_25

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  • Publisher Name: Humana Press, New York, NY

  • Print ISBN: 978-1-4939-7019-3

  • Online ISBN: 978-1-4939-7021-6

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