Heart
on a Chip Lets Scientists Mimic Blood Flow
ARLINGTON , Va. , Aug. 2, 2005 — A tiny chip that mimics the
circulatory system—right down to the rhythm of a human heartbeat—could
be a valuable tool for understanding the causes of cardiovascular
disease and for developing drug therapies.
In the July issue of the journal Analytical Chemistry,
researchers at the University of Michigan (UM) describe the
system of tiny valves and channels on the chip that mimic blood
flow in the body. This allows scientists to study the fluid
mechanical effects of blood flow (called shear stress) on endothelial
cells, which line the inner walls of blood vessels and play
a critical role in heart disease.
Changes in the flow rate and rhythm of blood can cause changes
in endothelial cells. Medical researchers want to know how these
changes can lead to diseases, such as hardening of the arteries
or thrombosis. Answering such questions will provide big clues
to developing therapies.
The chip's central feature is a pin system that was originally
designed for a device that helps the visually impaired read
e-mail, says Shuichi Takayama, Ph.D., a UM biomedical engineering
professor and corresponding author on the paper. Originally,
the pins moved up and down beneath a reader's fingertips to
represent certain Braille letters, thus translating what appears
on the computer screen.
In the U-M invention, the pins move up and down to plunge fluid
through a system of tiny channels drilled into the chip. The
pins function as the heart of the system and the channels as
the vasculature. A computer program acts as the brain of the
system to control pin movement, or the heart beat, and regulates
fluid flow patterns, or the pulse, through the vasculature.
The chip with the endothelial cell-lined vasculature is assembled
in three layers and sits on top of the pin system. The researchers
reported that the microfluidic blood flow caused endothelial
cells on the chip to significantly align and elongate in the
direction of the flow and in relation to the levels of shear
stress.
Studying endothelial cells in a Petri dish is often ineffective because the test environment is static, like bath water, says Takayama. The cells are not acting as they would in the body where they are exposed to flow, like in a river, he says. But with the U-M system, scientists can adjust the flow through the channels on the chip so that the endothelial cells think they are inside an artery or vein, or maybe even inside the blood vessels of a couch potato or a regular exerciser.
Existing model systems that attempt to closely mimic true physiological
flow conditions of blood in the body cannot perform multiple
experiments, are not easily portable, consume large amounts
of reagents, and can become contaminated easily, the researchers
said.
The U-M team's chip differs from others because the intricate
system of pumps and channels lets researchers sustain high levels
of shear stress on the cells for hours or days, with various
patterns of flow similar to the way in which endothelial cells
in the body are exposed to changing shear stress levels caused
when blood flows past the cell. The microfluidic valving and
pumping system lets researchers perform different tests simultaneously
in multiple channels on the same chip.
Takayama received a Whitaker Research Grant in 2001 titled Multi-Dimensional Cell Profiling Using an Artificial Endothelium.
Shuichi Takayama, University of Michigan
Mark Bowman, The Whitaker Foundation
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