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  4. Optimization of thin-film highly-compliant elastomer sensors for contractility measurement of muscle cells
 
research article

Optimization of thin-film highly-compliant elastomer sensors for contractility measurement of muscle cells

Araromi, O.
•
Poulin, Alexandre  
•
Rosset, Samuel  
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2016
Extreme Mechanics Letters

Test assays capable of providing quantitative characterization of the contraction of cardiac and smooth muscle cells are of great need for drug development and screening. Several methodologies have been proposed for achieving measurement of cell contractile stress or force, however almost all rely on optical methods to detect contraction. Recently, we proposed a test assay method based on the cell-induced deformation of thin-film, elastomeric, capacitive sensors. The method uses an electrical (capacitive) read-out enabling facile up-scaling to a large number of devices working in parallel for high-throughput measurements. We present here a model for the prediction and optimization of sensor performance. Our model shows the following trends: a) a cell region ratio of approximately 0.75 of the culture well radius produces the largest change in capacitance for a given cell contractile stress, b) the change in capacitance generated by cell contraction increases as the Young’s modulus, sensing layer thickness and electrode thicknesses of the sensor decrease, following an inverse relationship. A prototype device is fabricated and characterized in cell culture conditions. Mean standard deviations as lows as 0.2 pF are achieved (<0.05% of the initial sensor capacitance), representing a minimum detectable cell stress of 1.2 kPa, as predicted by our model. This sensitivity is sufficient to measure the contractile stress of smooth and cardiac muscle cell monolayers as reported in the literature.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.eml.2016.03.017
Web of Science ID

WOS:000395259300001

Author(s)
Araromi, O.
Poulin, Alexandre  
Rosset, Samuel  
Imboden, Matthias  
Favre, M.
Giazzon, M.
Martin-Olmos, C.
Sorba, Francesca  
Liley, M.
Shea, Herbert  
Date Issued

2016

Publisher

Elsevier Science Bv

Published in
Extreme Mechanics Letters
Volume

9

Issue

1

Start page

1

End page

10

Subjects

Thin-film elastomer sensors

•

Muscle cell contraction

•

Cell contraction assay

•

Dielectric elastomer sensors

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

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LMTS  
Available on Infoscience
April 8, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/125593
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