Mechanical impact stimulation platform tailored for high-resolution light microscopy

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    Abstract

    High frequency (HF) mechanical vibration has been used in vitro to study the cellular response to mechanical stimulation and induce stem cell differentiation. However, detailed understanding of the effect of the mechanical cues on cellular physiology is lacking. To meet this limitation, we have designed a system, which enables monitoring of living cells by high-resolution light microscopy during mechanical stimulation by HF vibration or mechanical impacts. The system consists of a commercial speaker, and a 3D printed sample vehicle and frame. The speaker moves the sample in the horizontal plane, allowing simultaneous microscopy. The HF vibration (30–200 Hz) performances of two vehicles made of polymer and aluminum were characterized with accelerometer. The mechanical impacts were characterized by measuring the acceleration of the aluminum vehicle and by time lapse imaging. The lighter polymer vehicle produced higher HF vibration magnitudes at 30–50 Hz frequencies than the aluminum vehicle. However, the aluminum vehicle performed better at higher frequencies (60–70 Hz, 90–100 Hz, 150 Hz). Compatibility of the system in live cell experiments was investigated with epithelial cells (MDCKII, expressing Emerald-Occludin) and HF (0.56 Gpeak, 30 Hz and 60 Hz) vibration. Our findings indicated that our system is compatible with high-resolution live cell microscopy. Furthermore, the epithelial cells were remarkable stable under mechanical vibration stimulation. To conclude, we have designed an inexpensive tool for the studies of cellular biophysics, which combines versatile in vivo like mechanical stimuli with live cell imaging, showing a great potential for several cellular applications.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalHEALTH AND TECHNOLOGY
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2019
    Publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

    Funding

    The authors are grateful for the financial support from Business Finland (Human Spare Parts), Academy of Finland (Centre of Excellence in Body-on-Chip Research), the City of Tampere, the Instrumentarium Science Foundation, the Finnish Cultural Foundation (The Kainuu Regional Fund and The Central Fund), and the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters (Väisälä Fund). Tampere imaging facility and MSc Paloheimo (Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology, Tampere University) are acknowledged for the excellent imaging resources and technical support. Furthermore, the authors thank MSc (Tech.) Laurila (Tampere University) for providing the Au-printed samples for the technical tests, and Mr. Jaala and Mr. Peurakoski (Tampere University) for their technical expertise and support in post-processing of the stimulator platform.

    Keywords

    • HF vibration
    • In vitro mechanical stimulation
    • Live cell imaging
    • Mechanical impacts
    • Mechanobiology
    • Real-time imaging

    Publication forum classification

    • Publication forum level 1

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