Abstract

BackgroundBiological systems have complicated environmental conditions that vary both spatially and temporally. It becomes necessary to impose time-varying soluble factor concentrations to study such systems, including cellular responses to pharmaceuticals, inflammation with waxing and waning cytokine concentrations, as well as circadian rhythms and their metabolic manifestations. There is therefore a need for platforms that can achieve time-varying concentrations with arbitrary waveforms.ResultsTo address this need, we developed a microfluidic system that can deliver concentration waveforms in a fast and accurate manner by adopting concepts and tools from electrical engineering and fluid mechanics. Specifically, we employed pulse width modulation (PWM), a commonly used method for generating analog signals from digital sources. We implement this technique using three microfluidic components via laser ablation prototyping: low-pass filter (lower frequency signals permitted, high frequency signals blocked), resistor, and mixer. Each microfluidic component was individually studied and iteratively tuned to generate desired concentration waveforms with high accuracy. Using fluorescein as a small-molecule soluble factor surrogate, we demonstrated a series of concentration waveforms, including square, sawtooth, sinusoidal, and triangle waves with frequencies ranging from 100 mHz to 400 mHz.ConclusionWe reported the fabrication and characterization of microfluidic platform that can generate time-varying concentrations of fluorescein with arbitrary waveforms. We envision that this platform will enable a wide range of biological studies, where time-varying soluble factor concentrations play a critical role. In addition, the technology is expected to assist in the development of biomedical devices that allow precise dosing of pharmaceuticals for enhanced therapeutic efficacy and reduced toxicity.

Highlights

  • Biological systems have complicated environmental conditions that vary both spatially and temporally

  • One way to categorize the waveform generators is with respect to their concentration pattern output, namely: digital concentration waveforms and analog concentration waveforms

  • We developed a microfluidic system that can modulate the concentration waveforms in a fast and accurate manner via pulse width modulation (PWM) that was controlled by electrical signals

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Summary

Introduction

Biological systems have complicated environmental conditions that vary both spatially and temporally. It becomes necessary to impose time-varying soluble factor concentrations to study such systems, including cellular responses to pharmaceuticals, inflammation with waxing and waning cytokine concentrations, as well as circadian rhythms and their metabolic manifestations. In order to model these complex dynamic biological processes, there is a need for sensors and actuators that can monitor and deliver time-varying concentrations of soluble factors [6]. Even though both the sensor and actuator components are important, the focus here is the latter and progress on the former can be found elsewhere [7,8,9]. One way to categorize the waveform generators is with respect to their concentration pattern output, namely: digital concentration waveforms (i.e., binary/pulsatile switching, which may be relevant for modeling insulin delivery [10]) and analog concentration waveforms

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