Litcius/Paper detail

Fluidic circuit board with modular sensor and valves enables stand-alone, tubeless microfluidic flow control in organs-on-chips

Aisen Vivas, Albert van den Berg, Robert Passier, Mathieu Odijk, Andries D. van der Meer

2022Lab on a Chip31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

tissue microenvironment is mimicked. Unfortunately, their widespread use is hampered by their operation complexity and incompatibility with end-user research settings. To address these issues, many commercial and non-commercial platforms have been developed for semi-automated culture of organs-on-chips. However, these organ-on-chip culture platforms each represent a closed ecosystem, with very little opportunity to interchange and integrate components from different platforms or to develop new ones. The translational organ-on-chip platform (TOP) is a multi-institutional effort to develop an open platform for automated organ-on-chip culture and integration of components from various developers. Central to TOP is the fluidic circuit board (FCB), a microfluidic plate with the form factor of a typical well plate. The FCB enables microfluidic control of multiple components like sensors or organ-on-chip devices through an interface based on openly available standards. Here, we report an FCB to integrate commercial and in-house developed components forming a stand-alone flow control system for organs-on-chips. The control system is able to achieve constant and pulsatile flow recirculation through a connected organ-on-chip device. We demonstrate that this system is able to automatically perfuse a heart-on-chip device containing co-cultures of cardiac tissues derived from human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes and monolayers of endothelial cells for five days. Altogether, we conclude that open technology platforms allow the integration of components from different sources to form functional and fit-for-purpose organ-on-chip systems. We anticipate that open platforms will play a central role in catalyzing and maturing further technological development of organ-on-chip culture systems.

Topics & Concepts

Modular designMicrofluidicsOrgan-on-a-chipFluidicsChipInterface (matter)EngineeringFlow control (data)Embedded systemComputer hardwareComputer scienceNanotechnologyMaterials scienceElectrical engineeringTelecommunicationsPulmonary surfactantGibbs isothermChemical engineeringOperating system3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchInnovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques InnovationAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologies