Bite-size summaries of new insights and innovations from the global bioengineering research community. Articles are ten days old or less (usually just a couple of days old). Each post has a link to the original paper if you want to read more. Find me on Twitter: @ros_daw .
Saturday, 19 July 2014
Further delays
Dear readers, We have had a very turbulent time in the past few months due to illness in the family and I have been unable to continue my blog. I do apologise to those who have been regularly visiting my site to see if any new updates have appeared. I hope to start again in a few weeks time. Many thanks for your patience.
Sunday, 8 June 2014
Break
Dear readers - due to a serious illness in the family I will not be posting here for a while. Hopefully back up and running in a week or so. Apologies and many thanks for all your support.
Friday, 6 June 2014
Cells in silica
Individual mammalian cells have been encapsulated in silica coatings using a quick and
relatively mild process carried out in cell culture medium. The coatings contain thiol groups from molecules
left over from the synthesis process offering opportunities for
post-functionalisation. Cell
proliferation was suppressed by the silica coat which also protected the cells from
the effects of trypsin and highly toxic poly (allylamine hydrochloride). Researchers suggest that modifications of the
coating could protect cells against a variety of other stressors such as heat
and UV. The approach might ultimately be useful for
applications where cells require protection and preservation such as cell-based
sensors as well as in single-cell studies.
Cytoprotective
Silica Coating of Individual Mammalian Cells Through Bioinspired Silicification,
J. Lee et al, Angewandte Chemie
International Edition; DOI: 10.1002/anie.201402280
Thursday, 5 June 2014
The effect of hyperglycaemic and hyperlipidemic conditions on cardiac cells in vitro
A simple cell culture model has captured biomechanical
effects similar to those observed in myocardial tissue during the onset of diabetic
cardiomyopathy. Cardiac myocytes were co-cultured
with cardiac fibroblasts in bilayers mimicking the layered structure of the
heart and then exposed to hyperglycaemic or hyperlipidemic conditions
associated with diabetes. In both
cases, particle-tracking microrheology revealed myocyte (but not fibroblast) stiffening;
AFM measurements supported the microrheological data.
Excess fatty acid also led to increased cFOS expression – and indicator
of hypertrophy. Further experiments hinted
at a possible mediating role for reactive oxygen species but more work is
required to understand the complex mechanisms underlying the observations.
Hyperglycemic
and Hyperlipidemic Conditions Alter Cardiac Cell
Biomechanical
Properties; J. Michaelson et al; Biophysical Journal; Volume 106 June 2014
2322–2329
Wednesday, 4 June 2014
Minimally-invasive device with multipoint optical stimulation for optogenetics
Researchers
have designed a minimally-invasive device that can selectively and dynamically
illuminate multiple brain regions for optogenetics applications. The device is a waveguide comprising a single
thin optical fibre with a sharp, tapered tip coated with gold (except for the
tip). Emission of desired modes of light
was permitted at specific sites along the taper by locally removing the coating
to create windows. Each window could be
addressed by adjusting the angle of the incident light on the input facet of
the fibre. In vivo proof of principle experiments demonstrated the
effectiveness of the device.
Multipoint-Emitting
Optical Fibers for Spatially Addressable In Vivo Optogenetics; F. Pisanello et al, Neuron; http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2014.04.041
Tuesday, 3 June 2014
Enhancing combined chemo- and radiotherapy in vivo with nanotechnology
A new targeted cancer therapy
termed quadrapeutics (after the four components of the therapy) radically
accelerated and improved the effect of combined chemotherapy and radiation in vivo.
Cancer cells self-assembled systemically administered
antibody-functionalized gold nanoparticles and drug-loaded nanocarriers into
intracellular nanoclusters via receptor-mediated endocytosis. Near-infra-red laser pulses heated the gold
nanoparticles generating vapour plasmonic nanobubbles which then exploded,
releasing the drugs from the nanocarriers into the cytoplasm. Subsequently, xray pulses were locally
amplified in the cancer cells through the emission of secondary electrons by
the gold nanoparticles in the nanoclusters.
Nanocluster size and thus effectiveness increased with the cancer
aggressiveness.
On-demand intracellular
amplification of chemoradiation with cancer-specific plasmonic nanobubbles; Ekaterina Y Lukianova-Hleb et al; Nature Medicine; doi:10.1038/nm.3484
Monday, 2 June 2014
Stem cell culture
June’s
issue of Nature Materials has a focus on stem cell culture. The first of three reviews discusses how various
inherent properties of materials may be engineered to regulate stem cell
decisions, while a second focuses on the influence of the nano scale
extracellular environment on stem cell fate via integrin-matrix
interactions. The third review outlines progress
in high-throughput materials discovery of growth
substrates for large-scale human pluripotent stem cell culture. A Perspective article discusses the interplay
between soluble factors and physical microenvironment in the control of stem
cell fate. A variety of primary research
articles and supporting “News and Views” pieces are also contained in the focus. Worth a look.
Sunday, 1 June 2014
Intracellular dynamics probed with nanotubes
The
movement of nanotube-labelled kinesin-1 motor proteins in cells was analysed
using fluorescence microscopy. At timeframes
above 100 ms, researchers observed a regime of kinesin molecular motion
different from thermal motion or directed motor activity. In this regime, the kinesins were bound to the
microtubule network, and moved randomly but remained locally constrained. Their dynamics reflected nonequilibrium fluctuations
in the microtubule network. These
fluctuations were driven by cytoplasmic myosin activity generating a random stirring
effect.
High-resolution
mapping of intracellular fluctuations using carbon nanotubes; N. Fakhri et al; Science; Vol 344(6187); p 1031
Friday, 30 May 2014
Mechanics in Biology and Medicine
Researchers from eleven different
institutions have identified specific areas of biology and medicine in which
mechanics could make significant contributions in a new Perspective article. Three areas were analysed: nanoparticle-based
drug delivery, medical devices, and cell mechanics.
Nanoparticle –based drug delivery is one
area ripe with opportunitiy. In
particular, modelling of the drug delivery process would reduce the need for physical experiments and
expedite nanoparticle design for improved delivery. Integrating computational modelling into the
rational design of nanoparticles offers the opportunity to improve nanoparticle
performance during, for example, vascular transport and endocytosis.
Modeling also has a role to play in improving
a variety of medical devices. For
example, recent developments in “organ-on-chip” devices require understanding
of complex transport behaviours through channels, gels and complex
tissues. In another area, advances in
ventricular assist devices could greatly benefit from computational mechanics
simulations to optimise design and hopefully mitigate problems such as thrombus
formation.
Finally, in the section entitled “cell mechanics”,
the authors identified a critical need for better
constitutive models for single-cell mechanical behaviour, taking into account
the active behaviour of cells. The
mechanics community could also contribute to the development of integrated
tools for single cell studies exploring biological variability.
This is just a brief summary of issues that particularly
resonated with me. If you’re interested
in the topic, I recommend you go to the full article. This is a long paper, and so my “Bites” length
rules are waived for this one.
USNCTAM perspectives on mechanics in
medicine; G. Bao et al, J. R. Soc. Interface 2014 11, 20140301
Thursday, 29 May 2014
Fishing for rare cells in blood samples
A multi-stage microfluidic
device separated tumour or leukaemic cells spiked into blood with high
efficiency. A filtration stage removed
cell aggregates and debris. Then a
carefully designed microfluidic channel generated hydrodynamic forces which
focussed the larger cancer cells into the channel centre; smaller blood cells
were separated off. The central fluid component
entered a third steric hindrance region which further purified the rare cells
by their size and mechanical properties.
High-throughput rare cell
separation from blood samples using steric hindrance and inertial microfluidics;
S. Chen et al, Lab on a Chip; DOI: 10.1039/c3lc51384j
Wednesday, 28 May 2014
Cotton-wool-like sol-gel glass from electrospinning
Researchers have combined sol-gel processing with electrospinning
to produce cotton-wool-like CaO-SiO2 glass structures. The cotton-wool-like morphology was
attributed to the rheological properties of the electrospinning solution causing
branching of the primary jet and to fibre regions rich in calcium ions creating
bending instabilites in the applied electric field. The material was moldable and could be packed
into complex bone defects. Preliminary
results suggested the materials were bioactive and non-cytotoxic.
Cotton-wool-like bioactive glasses for bone regeneration; G. Poologasundarampillai
et al; Acta Biomaterialia; http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/jactbio.2014.05.020
An open access paper
Tuesday, 27 May 2014
Symmetric protein nanomaterials from novel co-assembling protein subunits
A run of protein-based materials papers (excluding
yesterday’s dialysis paper). Apologies
for this – I do try to be diverse in content.
But this one is from my own journal Nature so I couldn’t
resist. Here it is.
Researchers have described the precise self-assembly
of protein nanomaterials from two novel co-assembling protein subunits. Computational methods were used to predict amino
acid sequences (one for each subunit) which would stabilize the interfaces
between the folded subunits and drive assembly of multiple copies into a specific
symmetric architecture. The researchers
experimentally verified the computational methods by fabricating five different
two-component co-asssembled nanomaterials each forming one of two targeted
tetrahedral architectures.
Accurate
design of co-assembling multi-component protein nanomaterials; N.P. King et al; Nature AOP;
doi:10.1038/nature13404
Monday, 26 May 2014
A miniaturised kidney dialysis machine for newborn babies
A miniaturised kidney dialysis machine with fluid
control capability for newborn babies has been developed. The dialyzer operates with a much lower
volume of blood and very low blood and ultrafiltration flows. The device allows the use of a small catheter
preventing damage to a baby’s blood vessels.
It has been successfully tested on a critically ill newborn baby. The patient was discharged from intensive
care after 39 days.
Continuous renal replacement therapy in neonates and small infants: development and first-in-human use of a miniaturised machine (CARPEDIEM); C. Ronco et al, The Lancet, Volume 383, Issue 9931, Pages 1807 - 1813, 24th May 2014
P.S. learn more about this technology and enjoy a "Cappucino with Claudio Ronco", the lead author of the paper in The Lancet, on Youtube http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL78_fieyQp35MHZ87bD0FnL1pvw7lvweU
Sunday, 25 May 2014
Concerted folding and networking of short peptides
Short
peptide sequences have been concomitantly folded into a specific helical
conformation and networked into a single crystal co-ordination material by
silver(I) co-ordination. The new
material contained two types of chiral nanochannel. The larger of the nanochannels, with a
diameter of around 2nm, offered a high degree of both chiral recognition and biomolecular
recognition. BF4-
counterions in the crystalline network could be exchanged with other anions in
a single-crystal-to-single-crystal transformation.
Coordination-Driven
Folding and Assembly of a Short Peptide into a Protein-like Two-Nanometer-Sized
Channel; T. Sawada et al, Angewandte
Chemie International Edition, DOI: 10.1002/anie.201403506
Saturday, 24 May 2014
Artificial biocomposites of silk fibroin and amyloid fibrils
Researchers
have combined two widely-studied fibrous protein assemblies – silk fibroin fibrils and
amyloid fibrils – into a novel composite material. By varying the weight ratio
of the two components, mechanical properties could be tuned: more amyloid fibril
increased tensile modulus whereas more silk fibroin promotes tougher composites.
The amyloid component could be enzymatically removed to generate a porous silk membrane. Inorganic components were also added and a
shape memory effect observed.
Modulating Materials by Orthogonally Oriented
β-Strands: Composites of Amyloid
and Silk Fibroin Fibrils; S. Ling et al; Advanced Materials; DOI:
10.1002/adma.201400730
Birthday!
Bioengineering Bites is one month old. Here are a few stats. Twenty five papers from eighteen different
journals were highlighted. Readers from
at least twenty different countries visited the site.
The readers choice for the month – the Bites with the most
hits – were
1. Vascularised hydrogels (10/05/14)
2. Lab-on-a-chip based blood plasma separation (30/04/14)
3. Bone marrow on a chip (05/05/14)
Take a look if you’ve not read them.
Many of you will have noticed that I increased the word limit of each Bite to 70 words to make life a little easier for me. I have also increased the maximum age that a paper can be for coverage by a few days. This is to minimise moments of bashing my head against a wall when I missed a paper I would have liked to highlight.
Many of you will have noticed that I increased the word limit of each Bite to 70 words to make life a little easier for me. I have also increased the maximum age that a paper can be for coverage by a few days. This is to minimise moments of bashing my head against a wall when I missed a paper I would have liked to highlight.
I’ve received lots of positive feedback on the site. I hope all readers find Bioengineering Bites interesting
and/or useful. I look forward to month
two!
Thursday, 22 May 2014
A shear stress threshold for angiogenesis
In vitro experiments using
microfabricated microfluidic devices have revealed a threshold of shear stress from
fluid flow above which endothelial cell monolayers sprout new blood
vessels. The shear stress also sustained
the sprout and prevented vessel retraction.
Further experiments revealed that matrix metalloproteinase 1 expression
increased dramatically at the shear threshold. These findings offer a basic mechanism for
regulating vessel densities in tissue modulated by other mechanical,
geometric,and biochemical factors.
Fluid
shear stress threshold regulates angiogenic sprouting; P.A.Galie et al; PNAS; doi:10.1073/pnas.1310842111
Wednesday, 21 May 2014
Self-powered sensor for human-machine interfacing
Researchers
have created a thin-film triboelectric sensor which uses a polymer-nanowire-decorated
triboelectric-negative polymer surface to achieve ultrasensitive tactile
sensing. The device harnessed the triboelectric charges generated in the polymer
surface upon contact with a foreign object to generate an output voltage. The sensor retained its functionality even
when applied to a curved surface. Demonstrated
applications included various alarm systems powered by touch alone. Approach also offers possibilities for electronic-skin-type
technologies.
Self-Powered,
Ultrasensitive, Flexible Tactile Sensors Based on Contact Electrification; G.
Zhu et al, Nano Letters;
dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl5005652
Tuesday, 20 May 2014
Graphene / MoS2 heterostructures for DNA detection
Researchers
have fabricated a graphene/MoS2 heterostructure for label-free selective
detection of DNA hybridization. The graphene protected the MoS2 from
ambient moisture and oxygen and acted as a biocompatible host for the DNA
molecules. The photoluminescence intensity
from the MoS2 layer increased with increased concentration of target
DNA. The differentiation of complementary and one-base mismatched DNA with the
graphene/MoS2 heterostructure could be performed at a concentration
as low as 1 attomole.
Graphene/MoS2 Heterostructures for
Ultrasensitive Detection of DNA Hybridisation; P.T.K. Loan et al, Advanced Materials; DOI: 10.1002/adma.201401084
Monday, 19 May 2014
The future of polymer therapeutics
Ruth
Duncan offers her perspective of the challenges and opportunities for the polymer
therapeutics community. She discusses
recent clinical successes and failures and offers valuable suggestions which
could improve translation of products from the lab to the clinic. Key considerations include (amongst others) appropriate
selection of polymer and drug for a specific application, sufficient materials
characterization (not just biological analysis), clinically relevant
preclinical models and improved clinical trial design.
Polymer therapeutics: Top 10 selling pharmaceuticals — What next?, R.Duncan,
Journal of Controlled Release, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2014.05.001
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168365914002922
Sunday, 18 May 2014
All the right journals?
Am I
looking at all the right journals? Let
me know which are your favourite journals to publish in and to read. If it’s not already on my list of journals to
search, it’ll go on! Let me know by
commenting to this post or emailing me at bioengineeringbites#yahoodotcom. I look forward to hearing from you!
Saturday, 17 May 2014
Manipulating cells on magnetic circuit boards
A circuit
board of magnetic pathways has enable precise manipulation of magnetic
particles and magnetic-nanoparticle-labeled cells in fluidic environments upon
application of a rotating magnetic field.
The trajectory of particles was programmable with conducting lines
integrated into the circuit board which allowed transportation of particles
from one pathway to another. The device had a multiplexed design to facilitate massively
parallel single cell operations such as cell sorting, experimentation and
retrieval.
Magnetophoretic
circuits for digital control of single particles and cells; B. Lim et al, Nature Communications; DOI:
10.1038/ncomms4846
Friday, 16 May 2014
Antibiotic AuPt nanoparticles
Researchers
have discovered that bimetallic nanoparticles containing gold and platinum act
as antimicrobial agents and are effective against a range of bacteria including
E.coli, Salmonella Choleraesius and Pseudomonas Aeruginosa. Pure gold or pure platinum nanoparticles were
not antibiotic at all. Investigations
suggested two mechanisms in operation: disruption of the cell
membranes and increased intracellular ATP.
The nanoparticles were not toxic to mammalian cells in vitro.
Tuning
the Composition of AuPt Bimetallic Nanoparticles for Antibacterial Applications,
Y. Zhao et al, Angewandte Chemie International Edition, DOI:
10.1002/anie.201401035
Labels:
Angewandte Chemie International Edition,
antibiotics,
ATP,
bacteria,
bimetallic,
cell membrane,
China,
E.coli,
gold,
in vitro,
nanoparticles,
Peudomonas Aeruginosa,
platinum,
Salmonella Choleraesius
Thursday, 15 May 2014
Enhancing photodynamic therapy using biomolecules
Researchers have demonstrated that the upconversion of
near-infra-red laser light to visible or ultra-violet by interactions with biomolecules
in-situ makes photodynamic therapy
more effective. A known photosensitizer
was activated by both near-infra-red light and the upconverted radiation
generated by nonlinear optical processes operating in either lipid molecules or
collagen. The approach substantially increased
the efficiency with which the photosensitizer destroyed cells in vitro compared to two-photon
absorption by near-infra-red alone.
Photodynamic
therapy by in situ nonlinear photon conversion, A. V. Kachynski et al, Nature Photonics AOP, DOI:
10.1038/NPHOTON.2014.90
Tuesday, 13 May 2014
Delivering siRNAs to endothelial cells
Scientists
have synthesised nanoparticles which efficiently delivered siRNAs to
endothelial cells in vivo and facilitated
silencing of up to five different endothelial genes concurrently. Gene expression in several other cell types
was not significantly affected by the presence of the delivery agent. The nanoparticles, made of
low-molecular-weight polyamines and lipids, reduced target gene expression in
multiple animal models. In lung cancer models,
primary tumour growth and metastases were both reduced.
In vivo endothelial siRNA delivery using
polymeric nanoparticles with low molecular weight; J.E. Dahlman et al, Nature Nanotechnology, DOI:
10.1038/NNANO.2014.84.
Monday, 12 May 2014
Polymer synthesis at microbial surfaces
A redox system operating in bacteria produces copper species
which can catalyse an ATRP-type polymerization at the bacterial surface,
researchers have shown. The resulting
macromolecules selectively bound to the microbial strain which templated them. The approach was also used to label polymer
side chains in-situ. Potential applications include diagnostics.
Bacteria-instructed synthesis of polymers for self-selective
microbial binding and labelling; E.P. Magennis et al, Nature Materials AOP; DOI:
10.1038/NMAT3949
Sunday, 11 May 2014
Mechanics of lipid membranes
Researchers describe a method for investigating the
viscosity of lipid membranes. Tracers
consisting of two microspheres coupled to a specific lipid allowed measurements
of translational and rotational diffusion co-efficient and thus viscosity. The method showed that adding vesicle
trafficking protein Sar1p to membranes resulted in dramatic increase in
membrane viscosity.
Measuring Lipid Membrane Viscosity Using Rotational and
Translational Probe Diffusion; T.T. Hormel et al; Physical Review Letters; 112,
188101 (2014)
Labels:
biomechanics,
cell membrane,
membrane vscosity,
methods,
PRL,
Sar1p,
USA
Saturday, 10 May 2014
Vascularised hydrogels
Researchers have created networks of microchannels in a
variety of hydrogels using a micromolding strategy. Networks of channels enhanced osteogenic
cell viability and differentiation in cell-laden micromolded gels. The channels could be lined with a confluent
layer of endothelial cells to create an engineered vasculature. The hydrogels remained fully perfused.
Hydrogel Bioprinted Microchannel
Networks for Vascularization of Tissue Engineering Constructs; L.E.Bertassoni
et al, Lab on a Chip, DOI: 10.1039/C4LC00030G
Friday, 9 May 2014
How cells change nanoparticles
The protein corona surrounding nanoparticles exposed to biological
cells changes according to nanoparticle characteristics, cell type and length of exposure, studies show. These changes alter nanoparticle aggregation,
cell membrane affinity, uptake and retention. Results suggest nanoparticles have an
ever-changing biological ‘identity’ as they travel through numerous
microenvironments in the body.
Secreted Biomolecules Alter the Biological
Identity and Cellular Interactions of Nanoparticles; A. Albanese et al; ACS
Nano; DOI: 10.1021/nn4061012
Wednesday, 7 May 2014
Non-invasive monitoring of fetal development
Researchers probed the temporal dynamics of gene
transcription in the cell-free RNA of pregnant women’s blood plasma. Microarray techniques and next-generation
sequencing data identified and quantified transcripts from specific fetal
tissues and placenta. Findings suggest a
route to diagnosing pregnancy complications and fetal abnormalities. Methods might also identify neurodegenerative
disorders.
Noninvasive
in vivo monitoring of tissue-specific global gene expression in humans; W. Koh
et al; PNAS; doi: 10.1073/pnas.1405528111
Tuesday, 6 May 2014
Bone marrow on a chip
Bone marrow grown within a device implanted in
a mouse resembles natural marrow, researchers reported. The tissue could be explanted whole, inserted into a lab-on-a-chip
and maintained in vitro for 7
days. The cultured marrow mimicked tissue
responses to radiation toxicity and treatment for exposure normally only observed
in vivo.
Bone marrow-on-a-chip replicates hematopoietic niche physiology in vitro; Y-S Torisawa et al; Nature Methods AOP doi:10.1038/nmeth.2938
Monday, 5 May 2014
Inflammation-induced drug release
Researchers
proposed and tested in vivo pH-responsive
microspheres with PLGA-shells and NaHCO3 / antibiotic cores for the
treatment of osteomyelitis. The acid from
infected bone tissue reacted with NaHCO3 to generate CO2 which
disrupted the PLGA shells and released the antibiotic. Microspheres were delivered via an injectable
calcium phosphate cement.
Inflammation-induced drug release by using a
pH responsive
gas-generating hollow-microsphere system for
the treatment of osteomyelitis; M.F. Chung et
al; Advanced Healthcare Materials; DOI: 10.1002/adhm.201400158.
Sunday, 4 May 2014
Micro-RNA sensor for cancer diagnostics
Micro-RNA-21
is overexpressed in many cancers. A new
magnetobiosensor selectively detected micro-RNA-21 at low concentrations in
cancer cells and tissue samples. RNA plant-virus proteins tethered to magnetic
beads captured DNA duplexes formed by adding anti-Micro-RNA-21 to the Micro-RNA-21-containing
samples. Beads were captured on screen-printed
electrodes for electrochemical detection of microRNA.
Magnetobiosensors
based on viral protein p19 for micro-RNA
determination in cancer cells and tissues; S. Campuzano et
al; Angewandte Chemie International Edition, DOI: 10.1002/anie.201403270
Friday, 2 May 2014
Mechanically functional engineered cartilage
Researchers
have mimicked mesenchymal condensation using a cellular self-assembly method to
successfully generate centimetre-sized anatomically-shaped cartilage from human
mesenchymal stem cells. The engineered
tissue was stratified with physiologically relevant values of Young’s modulus
and co-efficient of friction. In vitro
data suggested the method could be used to repair cartilage defects.
Large,
stratified and mechanically functional human cartilage grown in vitro by
mesenchymal condensation, S. Bhumiritana et al, PNAS,
doi/10.1073/pnas.1324050111
Thursday, 1 May 2014
Simulating neural networks
A fast and energy efficient circuit board which models
neural circuits in the human brain offers new opportunities for robotics and
brain-machine interfaces. The device
contains 16 chips and consumes just three watts to simulate in real time the
computing capability of a million neurons with billions of synaptic connections.
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=6805187
Neurogrid: A mixed-analog-digital multichip system for
large-scale neural simulations; B.V.Benjamin et al; Proceedings of the IEEE;
DOI 10.1109/JPROC.2014.2313565; 2014.
Wednesday, 30 April 2014
Lab-on-a-chip based blood plasma separation
Researchers have developed a cheap microfluidic device to
separate plasma from whole blood with efficiency similar to centrifugation. A filter at the top of a channel with blood flowing
upwards separated the fluid phase from the cells. Gravity-assisted
sedimentation prevented cells clogging the filter and subsequent hemolysis.
Hemolysis-free
blood plasma separation, JH Son et al,
Lab-on-a-chip, 2014, Accepted Manuscript, DOI: 10.1039/C4LC00149D
Link to article:
Tuesday, 29 April 2014
Mechanism of cell migration in confined channels
Cells may experience physical confinement when migrating through extracellular matrices. In confinement, processes typically associated with 2D migration e.g. actin polymerization are inhibited. Now, a chemotaxis-based microfluidic device containing microchannels of varying cross-sectional areas reveals an alternative mechanism of migration in confinement: water permeation and active and passive ion transport.
Water Permeation Drives Tumor Cell Migration in
Confined Microenvironments; K.M. Stroka et al, Cell 157, 611–623, April 24, 2014
Water Permeation Drives Tumor Cell Migration in Confined Microenvironments; K.M. Stroka et al, Cell 157, 611–623, April 24, 2014
Monday, 28 April 2014
Gene delivery at the bionic interface
Researchers report that intense electrical signals from the
electrode array forming the interface between cochlear implant and cochlea
stimulate gene delivery by electroporation.
Mesenchymal cells were transfected with genes which generated
brain-derived neurotrophic factor stimulating neurite growth and improving neurite-electrode
contact. This more integrated interface
could improve hearing dynamic range.
Close-Field Electroporation Gene Delivery Using the Cochlear Implant
Electrode Array Enhances the Bionic Ear; J.L.Pinyon et
al; Science Translational Medicine; 23 April 2014:
Vol. 6, Issue 233, p. 233ra54.
Sunday, 27 April 2014
Nano-factories of DNA for safer gene delivery
Traditional gene carriers are cationic to
allow efficient loading with anionic genes but these carriers are toxic
limiting clinical applications. Now
researchers report neutral liposomes containing DNA and PCR components which
amplify the DNA. Transfection rates are
similar to the traditional cationic vectors, but cell viability significantly
improved.
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1021/nn501106a
DNA amplification in
neutral liposomes for safe and efficient gene delivery; S. Lee et al; ACS Nano
Just Accepted Manuscript; DOI: 10.1021/nn501106a
Labels:
ACS Nano,
DNA,
drug delivery,
liposomes,
PCR,
South Korea
Friday, 25 April 2014
Graphenes in biology
Kostas Kostarelos and Kostya Novoselov discuss the difficulties of investigating how graphenes interact with biological systems. This family of materials can be produced in different ways, which control their thickness, size and surface functionalization all of which will modify cell-material interactions. Article also touches on issues of biodegradation and safety.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/344/6181/261.full
Exploring the interface of graphene and biology; K. Kostarelos and K Novoselov; Science; Vol. 344 no. 6181 pp. 261-263; 2014.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/344/6181/261.full
Exploring the interface of graphene and biology; K. Kostarelos and K Novoselov; Science; Vol. 344 no. 6181 pp. 261-263; 2014.
Thursday, 24 April 2014
Mechanics of stem cell nuclei
The cross-section of most materials contracts when stretched and expands when compressed. Auxetic materials do the opposite. Researchers now show that embryonic stem cell nuclei become auxetic when they enter a metastable state prior to differentiation. Data suggest that this is driven at least in part by global chromatin decondensation.
http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nmat3943.html
http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nmat3943.html
Auxetic nuclei in embryonic stem cells exiting pluripotency; S. Pagliara et al; Nature Materials (AOP); doi:10.1038/nmat3943
Wednesday, 23 April 2014
Barriers to commercially viable cell- and tissue therapies
Experts have identified hurdles to the successful commercialisation of innovations in regenerative medicine. Particularly, they recognised challenges in bioreactor-based manufacturing hindering the scale-up of therapies. This field is expensive and risky to invest in so the experts suggest developing manufacturing processes within academia rather than hoping for angel investment.
Manufacturing challenges in regenerative medicine; I. Martin et al; Science Translational Medicine; Vol. 6(232); p. 232; 2014.
http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/6/232/232fs16.full
Manufacturing challenges in regenerative medicine; I. Martin et al; Science Translational Medicine; Vol. 6(232); p. 232; 2014.
http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/6/232/232fs16.full
Introduction
Hello and welcome to my little blog. This is going to be more of a research news feed, where I will highlight interesting research papers, perspectives and reviews from the bioengineering research community in 50 word ‘bites’. I’ll aim for papers to be less than a week old. Happy reading!
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