Back to Search Start Over

Robotic Adherent Cell Injection for Characterizing Cell–Cell Communication.

Authors :
Liu, Jun
Siragam, Vinayakumar
Gong, Zheng
Chen, Jun
Fridman, Michael D.
Leung, Clement
Lu, Zhe
Ru, Changhai
Xie, Shaorong
Luo, Jun
Hamilton, Robert M.
Sun, Yu
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering. Jan2015, Vol. 62 Issue 1, p119-125. 7p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Compared to robotic injection of suspended cells (e.g., embryos and oocytes), fewer attempts were made to automate the injection of adherent cells (e.g., cancer cells and cardiomyocytes) due to their smaller size, highly irregular morphology, small thickness (a few micrometers thick), and large variations in thickness across cells. This paper presents a robotic system for automated microinjection of adherent cells. The system is embedded with several new capabilities: automatically locating micropipette tips; robustly detecting the contact of micropipette tip with cell culturing surface and directly with cell membrane; and precisely compensating for accumulative positioning errors. These new capabilities make it practical to perform adherent cell microinjection truly via computer mouse clicking in front of a computer monitor, on hundreds and thousands of cells per experiment (versus a few to tens of cells as state of the art). System operation speed, success rate, and cell viability rate were quantitatively evaluated based on robotic microinjection of over 4000 cells. This paper also reports the use of the new robotic system to perform cell–cell communication studies using large sample sizes. The gap junction function in a cardiac muscle cell line (HL-1 cells), for the first time, was quantified with the system. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00189294
Volume :
62
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
100077073
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/TBME.2014.2342036