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Microphysiological System for High-Throughput Computer Vision Measurement of Microtissue Contraction

Authors :
Michael A. Daniele
Ana Maria Gracioso Martins
Michael D. Wilkins
Donald O. Freytes
Frances S. Ligler
Source :
ACS Sens
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021.

Abstract

The ability to measure microtissue contraction in vitro can provide important information when modeling cardiac, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, dermal, and skeletal tissues. However, measuring tissue contraction in vitro often requires the use of high number of cells per tissue construct along with time-consuming microscopy and image analysis. Here, we present an inexpensive, versatile, high-throughput platform to measure microtissue contraction in a 96-well plate configuration using one-step batch imaging. More specifically, optical fiber microprobes are embedded in microtissues, and contraction is measured as a function of the deflection of optical signals emitted from the end of the fibers. Signals can be measured from all the filled wells on the plate simultaneously using a digital camera. An algorithm uses pixel-based image analysis and computer vision techniques for the accurate multiwell quantification of positional changes in the optical microprobes caused by the contraction of the microtissues. Microtissue constructs containing 20,000-100,000 human ventricular cardiac fibroblasts (NHCF-V) in 6 mg/mL collagen type I showed contractile displacements ranging from 20-200 μm. This highly sensitive and versatile platform can be used for the high-throughput screening of microtissues in disease modeling, drug screening for therapeutics, physiology research, and safety pharmacology.

Details

ISSN :
23793694
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Sensors
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb07913f5f591153247fba221d19c320
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.0c02172