A soft and ultrasensitive force sensing diaphragm for probing cardiac organoids instantaneously and wirelessly

Time-lapse mechanical properties of stem cell derived cardiac organoids are important biological cues for understanding contraction dynamics of human heart tissues, cardiovascular functions and diseases. However, it remains difficult to directly, instantaneously and accurately characterize such mech...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-11, Vol.13 (1), p.7259-7259, Article 7259
Hauptverfasser: Lyu, Quanxia, Gong, Shu, Lees, Jarmon G., Yin, Jialiang, Yap, Lim Wei, Kong, Anne M., Shi, Qianqian, Fu, Runfang, Zhu, Qiang, Dyer, Ash, Dyson, Jennifer M., Lim, Shiang Y., Cheng, Wenlong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Time-lapse mechanical properties of stem cell derived cardiac organoids are important biological cues for understanding contraction dynamics of human heart tissues, cardiovascular functions and diseases. However, it remains difficult to directly, instantaneously and accurately characterize such mechanical properties in real-time and in situ because cardiac organoids are topologically complex, three-dimensional soft tissues suspended in biological media, which creates a mismatch in mechanics and topology with state-of-the-art force sensors that are typically rigid, planar and bulky. Here, we present a soft resistive force-sensing diaphragm based on ultrasensitive resistive nanocracked platinum film, which can be integrated into an all-soft culture well via an oxygen plasma-enabled bonding process. We show that a reliable organoid-diaphragm contact can be established by an ‘Atomic Force Microscope-like’ engaging process. This allows for instantaneous detection of the organoids’ minute contractile forces and beating patterns during electrical stimulation, resuscitation, drug dosing, tissue culture, and disease modelling. It is challenging to directly characterize mechanical properties of soft 3D cardiac organoids with current sensors. Here the authors report an electronic skin-based all-soft organoid-sensing system which can wirelessly monitor minute force profiles of cardiac organoids in real-time in-situ.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-34860-y