Abstract

Various material processing techniques have been proposed for fabrication of smart surfaces that can modulate cellular behavior and address specific clinical issues. Among them, laser-based technologies have attracted growing interest due to processing versatility. Latest development of ultrashort pulse lasers with pulse widths from several tens of femtoseconds (fs) to several picoseconds (ps) allows clean microfabrication of a variety of materials at micro- and nanoscale both at surface and in volume. In this study, we addressed the possibility of 3D microfabrication of photosensitive glass (PG) by high repetition rate ps laser-assisted etching (PLAE) to improve the fabrication efficiency for the development of useful tools to be used for specific biological applications. Microfluidic structures fabricated by PLAE should provide the flow aspects, 3D characteristics, and possibility of producing functional structures to achieve the biologically relevant microenvironments. Specifically, the microfluidic structures could induce cellular chemotaxis over extended periods in diffusion-based gradient media. More importantly, the 3D characteristics could reproduce capillaries for in vitro testing of relevant organ models. Single cell trapping and analysis by using the fabricated microfluidic structures are also essential for understanding individual cell behavior within the same population. To this end, this paper demonstrates: (1) generation of 3D structures in glass volume or on surface for fabrication of microfluidic channels, (2) subtractive 3D surface patterning to create patterned molds in a controlled manor for casting polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) structures and developing single cell microchambers, and (3) designing glass photo-masks to be used for sequel additive patterning of biocompatible nanomaterials with controlled shapes, sizes, and periodicity. Mesenchymal stem cells grown on laser-processed glass surfaces revealed no sign of cytotoxicity, while a collagen thin coating improved cellular adhesion.

Highlights

  • Biochips, such as microfluidic, lab-on-a-chip, and organ-on-a-chip devices, and micro total analysis systems have opened a new door for medical and biological investigations due to capability of generating biologically relevant microenvironments and potential of single cell analysis [1,2]

  • We recently introduced the possibility of precise microfabrication of photosensitive glass (PG) volume by high repetition rate ps laser-assisted etching (PLAE) [28]

  • Ultrashort pulse laser processing of transparent Foturan glass with ps pulses was rarely addressed in the literatures

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Summary

Introduction

Biochips, such as microfluidic, lab-on-a-chip, and organ-on-a-chip devices, and micro total analysis systems have opened a new door for medical and biological investigations due to capability of generating biologically relevant microenvironments and potential of single cell analysis [1,2]. Glass biochips fabricated by FLAE represent innovative platforms that are extensively explored to advance fundamental studies, and clinical applications in nanomedicine for overcoming the limitations of traditional biomedical approaches [7,41,42]. They can further represent miniaturized micropatterned devices, including but not limited to microfluidics, microwell chips, and microarrays proposed for specific bioassays. Microfluidic devices were applied for cell cultures and single cell immobilization

Methods
Evaluation of line widths’
Results and Discussion
Fabrication of Large-Scale Microfluidic Channels in PG
Microfluidic chip fabricatedby by PLAE
Fabrication of PG glass afterlaser laserexposure exposure annealing treatment:
Conclusions
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