This open version of Fluidic 653 Organ-on-a-Chip features two distinct culture chambers, accessible via multiple inlets and outlets, allowing co-culture of various cell types within two separate compartments divided by a permeable membrane. It has an open top for easy access to the upper chamber and can be sealed afterward to pursue experiments.
The inlets and outlets with integrated Mini Luer connections ensure leak-free junctions with the tubing and allow experiments under dynamic flow conditions.
General
This Organ-on-a-Chip with a cross-flow membrane allows you to reliably mimic physiological conditions in vitro and study tissue organization, cell-cell interactions, barrier penetration, and physiological responses in a more in vivo-like environment.
Two different and independent culture chambers are available on the same chip. This allows you to perform two experiments in parallel or in series (body-on-a-chip). The chip comes without the cover lid on the upper chamber for easy access to the membrane from the top. The chip is equipped with medical-grade double-sided tape to seal the chip with a lid of choice.
The two chambers are designed to develop models of physiological barriers and to ensure an in vivo-like environment under static or dynamic flow conditions. Each chamber indeed has multiple flow inlets and outlets for the perfusion of culture media and testing solutions in both the apical and basolateral compartments.
The chip comes with three options of PET membranes having different pore sizes. Choose between an 8 µm porous membrane.
Features
- Mini Luer connection molded with the chip: leak-free
- Highly resistant and optically clear material: Topas (COC, cyclic olefin copolymer)
- Standard microscope glass slide size (75.5 mm x 25.5 mm x 1.5 mm)
- Cover lid thickness: 140 µm
- 2 independent cell culture chambers
- Porous PET membrane: pore Φ of 8 µm
Cross-flow porous membrane | Upper/Apical compartment | Bottom/Basolateral compartment |
Applications and examples from published papers
The upper and the lower compartments are separated by the porous membrane, and they can be perfused with different culture media. A tissue interface can be created to mimic alveolar, stomach, intestine, kidney, liver, brain-blood, skin functions, etc. Tissues inside the chip can be easily observed by microscopy.
Cell culture is just one potential application area of this versatile chip. The design indeed allows other different experiments such as small molecule transfer measurements, on-chip dialysis, and many more.
Intestine-on-chip
Maurer M. et al., A three-dimensional immunocompetent intestine-on-chip model as in vitro platform for functional and microbial interaction studies, Biomaterials 2019 (Download)
3D microphysiological model of the human intestine.
In this work, the model displays the physiological immune tolerance of the intestinal lumen to microbial-associated molecular patterns and can, therefore, be colonized with living microorganisms. The authors demonstrate that microbial interactions can be efficiently investigated using this chip creating a more physiological and immunocompetent microenvironment.
Endothelial Barrier-on-chip
Raasch M. et al., Microfluidically supported biochip design for culture of endothelial cell layers with improved perfusion conditions, Biofabrication 2015, 7: 015013 (Download)
The authors investigated cell viability, expression of endothelial markers, and cell adhesion molecules of ECs dynamically cultured under low and high shear stress. This chip allows an effective supply with nutrition medium, discharge of catabolic cell metabolites, and defined application of shear stress to ECs under laminar flow conditions.
They show that ECs cultured in the chip form a tight EC monolayer with increased cellular density and enhanced cell layer thickness compared to static and two-dimensionally perfused cell culture conditions. Endothelial layers in the chip express higher amounts of EC marker proteins von-Willebrand-factor and PECAM-1.
Liver-on-chip
Rennert K. et al., A microfluidically perfused three dimensional human liver model, Biomaterials 2015, 119-131 (Download)
The microfluidically perfused chip enables sufficient nutrition supply and resembles morphological aspects of the human liver sinusoid. It utilizes a suspended membrane as a cell substrate mimicking the space of Disse and the perfusion enhances the formation of hepatocyte microvilli. The authors stated that the perfused liver chip shares relevant morphological and functional characteristics with the human liver and represents a new in vitro research tool to study human hepatocellular physiology at the cellular level under conditions close to the physiological situation.
During culture in the biochip HepaRG cells consistently differentiate into cells exhibiting a hepatocyte phenotype and into cells with biliary epithelial cell phenotype that self-organize into a hepatocyte layer with functional bile ducts.
Content
1x Cross-flow membrane organ-on-a-chip with open top and Mini Luer ports
Specifications
Please use this information to precisely define the key parameters of your cell seeding and experimental protocols. One chip allows you to perform two independent experiments.
Upper compartment | Bottom compartment | |
Volume (µL) | 145 | 101.8 |
Total surface (mm²) | 595 | 419 |
Ground surface (mm²) | 223.5 | 185 |
Porous membrane | ||
Area of interaction (mm²) | 71.5 | |
Pore size (µm) | 0.4 | 8 |
Membrane reference | mcs-membrane 132 | mcs-membrane 120 |
Pore density (pores/cm²) | 4×10^6 | 1×10^5 |
Thickness (µm) | 12 | 11 |
Membrane material | Hydrophilized polyethylene terephthalate (PET) | |
Color | Transparent | Transparent |
Pore orientation | perpendicular | perpendicular |
Imaging | Yes | Yes |
Chip material | Topas (COC) | Topas (COC) |
Lid thickness (µm) | 140 | 140 |
Documentation
Click to read more information about ChipShop chips material properties.
? General handling guide for cross-flow membrane chips (available soon)
? Cross-flow membrane chip with open chamber Fluidic 653 datasheet
? General handling guide for open chips
Maurer, M., Gresnigt, M. S., Last, A., Wollny, T., Berlinghof, F., Pospich, R., ... & Mosig, A. S. (2019). A three-dimensional immunocompetent intestine-on-chip model as in vitro platform for functional and microbial interaction studies. Biomaterials,220, 119396. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.119396
Raasch, M., Rennert, K., Jahn, T., Peters, S., Henkel, T., Huber, O., ... & Mosig, A. (2015). Microfluidically supported biochip design for culture of endothelial cell layers with improved perfusion conditions. Biofabrication, 7(1), 015013. doi:10.1088/1758-5090/7/1/015013
Rennert, K., Steinborn, S., Gröger, M., Ungerböck, B., Jank, A. M., Ehgartner, J., Nietzsche, S., Dinger, J., Kiehntopf, M., Funke, H., Peters, F. T., Lupp, A., Gärtner, C., Mayr, T., Bauer, M., Huber, O., & Mosig, A. S. (2015). A microfluidically perfused three dimensional human liver model. Biomaterials, 71, 119–131. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2015.08.043
This open version of Fluidic 653 Organ-on-a-Chip features two distinct culture chambers, accessible via multiple inlets and outlets, allowing co-culture of various cell types within two separate compartments divided by a permeable membrane. It has an open top for easy access to the upper chamber and can be sealed afterward to pursue experiments.
The inlets and outlets with integrated Mini Luer connections ensure leak-free junctions with the tubing and allow experiments under dynamic flow conditions.
General
This Organ-on-a-Chip with a cross-flow membrane allows you to reliably mimic physiological conditions in vitro and study tissue organization, cell-cell interactions, barrier penetration, and physiological responses in a more in vivo-like environment.
Two different and independent culture chambers are available on the same chip. This allows you to perform two experiments in parallel or in series (body-on-a-chip). The chip comes without the cover lid on the upper chamber for easy access to the membrane from the top. The chip is equipped with medical-grade double-sided tape to seal the chip with a lid of choice.
The two chambers are designed to develop models of physiological barriers and to ensure an in vivo-like environment under static or dynamic flow conditions. Each chamber indeed has multiple flow inlets and outlets for the perfusion of culture media and testing solutions in both the apical and basolateral compartments.
The chip comes with three options of PET membranes having different pore sizes. Choose between an 8 µm porous membrane.
Features
- Mini Luer connection molded with the chip: leak-free
- Highly resistant and optically clear material: Topas (COC, cyclic olefin copolymer)
- Standard microscope glass slide size (75.5 mm x 25.5 mm x 1.5 mm)
- Cover lid thickness: 140 µm
- 2 independent cell culture chambers
- Porous PET membrane: pore Φ of 8 µm
Cross-flow porous membrane | Upper/Apical compartment | Bottom/Basolateral compartment |
Applications and examples from published papers
The upper and the lower compartments are separated by the porous membrane, and they can be perfused with different culture media. A tissue interface can be created to mimic alveolar, stomach, intestine, kidney, liver, brain-blood, skin functions, etc. Tissues inside the chip can be easily observed by microscopy.
Cell culture is just one potential application area of this versatile chip. The design indeed allows other different experiments such as small molecule transfer measurements, on-chip dialysis, and many more.
Intestine-on-chip
Maurer M. et al., A three-dimensional immunocompetent intestine-on-chip model as in vitro platform for functional and microbial interaction studies, Biomaterials 2019 (Download)
3D microphysiological model of the human intestine.
In this work, the model displays the physiological immune tolerance of the intestinal lumen to microbial-associated molecular patterns and can, therefore, be colonized with living microorganisms. The authors demonstrate that microbial interactions can be efficiently investigated using this chip creating a more physiological and immunocompetent microenvironment.
Endothelial Barrier-on-chip
Raasch M. et al., Microfluidically supported biochip design for culture of endothelial cell layers with improved perfusion conditions, Biofabrication 2015, 7: 015013 (Download)
The authors investigated cell viability, expression of endothelial markers, and cell adhesion molecules of ECs dynamically cultured under low and high shear stress. This chip allows an effective supply with nutrition medium, discharge of catabolic cell metabolites, and defined application of shear stress to ECs under laminar flow conditions.
They show that ECs cultured in the chip form a tight EC monolayer with increased cellular density and enhanced cell layer thickness compared to static and two-dimensionally perfused cell culture conditions. Endothelial layers in the chip express higher amounts of EC marker proteins von-Willebrand-factor and PECAM-1.
Liver-on-chip
Rennert K. et al., A microfluidically perfused three dimensional human liver model, Biomaterials 2015, 119-131 (Download)
The microfluidically perfused chip enables sufficient nutrition supply and resembles morphological aspects of the human liver sinusoid. It utilizes a suspended membrane as a cell substrate mimicking the space of Disse and the perfusion enhances the formation of hepatocyte microvilli. The authors stated that the perfused liver chip shares relevant morphological and functional characteristics with the human liver and represents a new in vitro research tool to study human hepatocellular physiology at the cellular level under conditions close to the physiological situation.
During culture in the biochip HepaRG cells consistently differentiate into cells exhibiting a hepatocyte phenotype and into cells with biliary epithelial cell phenotype that self-organize into a hepatocyte layer with functional bile ducts.
Content
1x Cross-flow membrane organ-on-a-chip with open top and Mini Luer ports
Specifications
Please use this information to precisely define the key parameters of your cell seeding and experimental protocols. One chip allows you to perform two independent experiments.
Upper compartment | Bottom compartment | |
Volume (µL) | 145 | 101.8 |
Total surface (mm²) | 595 | 419 |
Ground surface (mm²) | 223.5 | 185 |
Porous membrane | ||
Area of interaction (mm²) | 71.5 | |
Pore size (µm) | 0.4 | 8 |
Membrane reference | mcs-membrane 132 | mcs-membrane 120 |
Pore density (pores/cm²) | 4×10^6 | 1×10^5 |
Thickness (µm) | 12 | 11 |
Membrane material | Hydrophilized polyethylene terephthalate (PET) | |
Color | Transparent | Transparent |
Pore orientation | perpendicular | perpendicular |
Imaging | Yes | Yes |
Chip material | Topas (COC) | Topas (COC) |
Lid thickness (µm) | 140 | 140 |
Documentation
Click to read more information about ChipShop chips material properties.
? General handling guide for cross-flow membrane chips (available soon)
? Cross-flow membrane chip with open chamber Fluidic 653 datasheet
? General handling guide for open chips
Maurer, M., Gresnigt, M. S., Last, A., Wollny, T., Berlinghof, F., Pospich, R., ... & Mosig, A. S. (2019). A three-dimensional immunocompetent intestine-on-chip model as in vitro platform for functional and microbial interaction studies. Biomaterials,220, 119396. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.119396
Raasch, M., Rennert, K., Jahn, T., Peters, S., Henkel, T., Huber, O., ... & Mosig, A. (2015). Microfluidically supported biochip design for culture of endothelial cell layers with improved perfusion conditions. Biofabrication, 7(1), 015013. doi:10.1088/1758-5090/7/1/015013
Rennert, K., Steinborn, S., Gröger, M., Ungerböck, B., Jank, A. M., Ehgartner, J., Nietzsche, S., Dinger, J., Kiehntopf, M., Funke, H., Peters, F. T., Lupp, A., Gärtner, C., Mayr, T., Bauer, M., Huber, O., & Mosig, A. S. (2015). A microfluidically perfused three dimensional human liver model. Biomaterials, 71, 119–131. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2015.08.043