Under-Oil Autonomously Regulated Oxygen Microenvironments: A Goldilocks Principle-Based Approach For Microscale Cell Culture
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Abstract
Oxygen levels in vivo are autonomously regulated by a supply-demand balance, which can be altered in disease states. However, the oxygen levels of in vitro cell culture systems, particularly microscale cell culture, are typically dominated by either supply or demand. Further, the oxygen microenvironment in these systems are rarely monitored or reported. Here, we present a method to establish and dynamically monitor autonomously regulated oxygen microenvironments (AROM) using an oil overlay in an open microscale cell culture system. Using this method, the oxygen microenvironment is dynamically regulated via a supply-demand balance of the system. We simulate the kinetics of oxygen diffusion in multiliquid-phase microsystems on COMSOL Multiphysics and experimentally validate the method using a variety of cell types including mammalian, fungal and bacterial cells. Finally, we demonstrate the utility of this method to establish a co-culture between primary intestinal epithelial cells and a highly prevalent human gut species Bacteroides uniformis .
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- europepmc
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