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  4. Biochips for Regenerative Medicine: Real-time Stem Cell Continuous Monitoring as Inferred by High-Throughput Gene Analysis
 
research article

Biochips for Regenerative Medicine: Real-time Stem Cell Continuous Monitoring as Inferred by High-Throughput Gene Analysis

Zhu, Lisha
•
Del Vecchio, Giovanna
•
De Micheli, Giovanni  
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2011
BioNanoScience

Regenerative medicine is a novel clinical branch aiming at the cure of diseases by replacement of damaged tissues. The crucial use of stem cells makes this area rich of challenges, given the poorly understood mechanisms of differentiation. One highly needed and yet unavailable technology should allow us to monitor the exact (metabolic) state of stem cells differentiation to maximize the effectiveness of their implant in vivo. This is challenged by the fact that not all relevant metabolites in stem cells differentiation are known and not all metabolites can currently be continuously monitored. To bring advancements in this direction, we propose the enhancement and integration of two available technologies into a general pipeline. Namely, high-throughput biochip for gene expression screening to pre-select the variables that are most likely to be relevant in the identification of the stem cells’ state and low-throughput biochip for continuous monitor- ing of cell metabolism with highly sensitive carbon nanotubes-based sensors. Intriguingly, additionally to the involvement of multidisciplinary expertise (medi- cine, molecular biology, computer science, engineer- ing, and physics), this whole query heavily relies on biochips: it starts in fact from the use of high- throughput ones, which output, in turn, becomes the base for the design of low-throughput, highly sensitive biochips. Future research is warranted in this direction to develop and validated the proposed device.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1007/s12668-011-0028-z
Author(s)
Zhu, Lisha
Del Vecchio, Giovanna
De Micheli, Giovanni  
Liu, Yuanhua
Carrara, Sandro  
Calzà, Laura
Nardini, Christine
Date Issued

2011

Published in
BioNanoScience
Volume

1

Issue

4

Start page

183

End page

191

Subjects

High-throughput biology

•

Nano-structured biochip

•

Stem cell differentiation

•

Metabolic pathways/markers

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSI1  
Available on Infoscience
November 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/72639
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