Team:ETH Zurich/lab/chip

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In the following, we have investigated the combination of additive manufacturing (3D-printing) and PDMS chip fabrication for applications in synthetic biology. This rapid prototyping approach allowed us to update our chips continuously according to new insights from modeling or the wet lab and in particular to avoid more intricate photolitographic approaches, which generally require clean room access, relatively expensive raw materials, and in depth knowledge of etching techniques.
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In the following, we have investigated the combination of additive manufacturing (3D-printing) and PDMS chip fabrication for applications in synthetic biology. This rapid prototyping approach allowed us to update our chips continuously according to new [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/modeling/diffmodel insights from modeling] or the wet lab and in particular to avoid more intricate photolitographic approaches, which generally require clean room access, relatively expensive raw materials, and in depth knowledge of etching techniques.
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==Mold Design and 3D Print Exchange==
==Mold Design and 3D Print Exchange==
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|'''Figure 3-a''' The first design for a gel-comb, a mold for a millifluidic PDMS chip and a corresponding box for the mold.
|'''Figure 3-a''' The first design for a gel-comb, a mold for a millifluidic PDMS chip and a corresponding box for the mold.
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|'''Figure 3-b''' The final mold design for our millifluid PDMS chip used for cell-to-cell communication experiments.  
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|'''Figure 3-b''' The final mold design for our millifluid PDMS chip used for [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/project/background/biotools#Quorum_Sensing cell-to-cell communication] experiments.  
|'''Figure 3-c''' A design for a 96-well plate with connected wells, which allows automated measurements in a plate reader.
|'''Figure 3-c''' A design for a 96-well plate with connected wells, which allows automated measurements in a plate reader.
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All mesh files designed during the project will be made available at the [http://3dprint.nih.gov/ NIH 3D Print Exchange] under the category 'Custom Labware' via our [http://3dprint.nih.gov/users/ethzurichigem2014 ETH_Zurich_iGEM2014] account.
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'''All mesh files designed during the project will be made available at the [http://3dprint.nih.gov/ NIH 3D Print Exchange] under the category 'Custom Labware' via our [http://3dprint.nih.gov/users/ethzurichigem2014 ETH_Zurich_iGEM2014] account.
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==3D-Printing and Rapid Prototyping==
==3D-Printing and Rapid Prototyping==
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All fabricated structures were ready to use after removing the support structures and did not require additional surface treatments like sonication, curing, painting or silanization. The molds were then directly used for PDMS chip production. In addition, custom made black 96-well plates (connected wells for diffusion assays, plate reader compatible) were printed but found to be leaky over time. The material costs of the molds were in the range of US$2 to US$4 and for the 96-well plates below US$8 (about US$160 per kg of ABS). The maximum resistance to continuous heat is given as 90 ⁰C <sup>[[Team:ETH_Zurich/project/references#refCRC|[23]]]</sup>, as a result autoclaving at 121 ⁰C was not feasible (see fig. 5-a).
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All fabricated structures were ready to use after removing the support structures and did not require additional surface treatments like sonication, curing, painting or silanization. The molds were then directly used for PDMS chip production. In addition, custom made black 96-well plates (connected wells for diffusion assays, plate reader compatible) were printed but found to be leaky over time. The material costs of the molds were in the range of US$2 to US$4 and for the 96-well plates below US$8 (about US$160 per kg of ABS). The maximum resistance to continuous heat is given as 90 ⁰C <sup>[[Team:ETH_Zurich/project/references#refCRC|[23]]]</sup>, as a result autoclaving at 121 ⁰C was not feasible and led to deformation (see the box in figure 5-a).
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|'''Figure 5-d''' Printed 96-well plate, all wells (edge length of 5 mm) are connected.
|'''Figure 5-d''' Printed 96-well plate, all wells (edge length of 5 mm) are connected.
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==PDMS Chip Preparation==
==PDMS Chip Preparation==
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For the fabrication of millifluidic-chips raw PDMS (Dow Corning Sylgard 184) was prepared by mixing base and curing agent in 10:1 proportion. The PDMS solution was mixed vigorously and degassed (desiccator connected to vacuum) until no  further bubble formation could be observed. Subsequently the mixture was poured over the mold and cured in an vacuum oven over night at RT. The PDMS chip was easily removed without additional aids and placed in clear plastic trays (86 x 128 mm; OmniTrays, Thermo Scientific). The wells were then filled with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/protocols#Complex_bead_medium_.28CB_medium.29 CB medium] and loaded with cells encapsulated in [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads].
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For the fabrication of millifluidic-chips raw PDMS (Dow Corning Sylgard 184) was prepared by mixing base and curing agent in 10:1 proportion. The PDMS solution was mixed vigorously and degassed (desiccator connected to vacuum) until no  further bubble formation could be observed. Subsequently the mixture was poured over the mold and cured in an vacuum oven over night at RT. While the first mold design separated insufficiently from the PDMS due to an inappropriate aspect ratio (see figures 6-a and 7-a), all other PDMS chips were easily removed without additional aids and placed in clear plastic trays (86 x 128 mm; OmniTrays, Thermo Scientific).  All the mold shown below were at least used once before the pictures were taken. The PDMS wells were then filled with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/protocols#Complex_bead_medium_.28CB_medium.29 CB medium] and loaded with cells encapsulated in [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads].
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|'''Figure 6-a''' The very first mold design. PDMS stuck between the wells while removing it.  
|'''Figure 6-a''' The very first mold design. PDMS stuck between the wells while removing it.  
|'''Figure 6-b''' Mold design for a diffusion assay with two connected chambers (edge length of 4 mm) with varied channel length (1 mm to 4 mm).
|'''Figure 6-b''' Mold design for a diffusion assay with two connected chambers (edge length of 4 mm) with varied channel length (1 mm to 4 mm).
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|'''Figure 6-c''' The final mold design for cell-to-cell communication experiments (edge length of 5 mm, channel length of 3 mm).  
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|'''Figure 6-c''' The final mold design for [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/project/background/biotools#Quorum_Sensing cell-to-cell communication] experiments (edge length of 5 mm, channel length of 3 mm).  
|'''Figure 6-d''' Close up of the final mold design. The separate layers are clearly visible ('additive' manufacturing).
|'''Figure 6-d''' Close up of the final mold design. The separate layers are clearly visible ('additive' manufacturing).
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|'''Figure 7-a''' The very first PDMS chip. As the close-up shows, the outer parts are well defined, but the middle part did not separate from the mold due to an inappropriate aspect ratio.
|'''Figure 7-a''' The very first PDMS chip. As the close-up shows, the outer parts are well defined, but the middle part did not separate from the mold due to an inappropriate aspect ratio.
|'''Figure 7-b''' PDMS chip for diffusion assays with two connected chambers (edge length of 4 mm) and varied channel length (1 mm to 4 mm).
|'''Figure 7-b''' PDMS chip for diffusion assays with two connected chambers (edge length of 4 mm) and varied channel length (1 mm to 4 mm).
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|'''Figure 7-c''' The final PDMS chip for cell-to-cell communication experiments (edge length of 5 mm, channel length of 3 mm).  
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|'''Figure 7-c''' The final PDMS chip for [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/project/background/biotools#Quorum_Sensing cell-to-cell communication] experiments (edge length of 5 mm, channel length of 3 mm).  
|'''Figure 7-d''' Close up of the final PDMS chip. The channels are well defined and even small structures separated evenly from the mold.
|'''Figure 7-d''' Close up of the final PDMS chip. The channels are well defined and even small structures separated evenly from the mold.
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==Time-Lapse Movies==
==Time-Lapse Movies==
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Below you find an overview of the time-lapse movies taken during the summer. In the very first trial the wells were filled with LB agar, holes were punched with a pipette tip and filled with highlighter-ink (pyranine) to visualize diffusion (see video 1). Later, different set-ups were tested: chambers filled with liquid medium separated by solidified 2% agarose in the connecting channel and alginate beads in liquid medium. We continued with the 'alginate beads in  liquid medium' set-up, as it yielded the most promising intermediate results, and could then finally show cell-to-cell communication of bacteria confined in beads on our millifluid chip.
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Below you find an overview of the time-lapse movies taken during the summer. In the very first trial the wells were filled with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/protocols#LB_medium_from_dehydrated_product LB agar], holes were punched with a pipette tip and filled with highlighter-ink ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyranine pyranine]) to visualize diffusion (see video 1). Later, different set-ups were tested: chambers filled with liquid [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/protocols#LB_medium_from_dehydrated_product LB medium] separated by solidified 2% agarose in the connecting channel and [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads] in liquid [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/protocols#Complex_bead_medium_.28CB_medium.29 CB medium]. We continued with the 'alginate beads in  liquid medium' set-up, as it yielded the most promising intermediate results, and could then finally show cell-to-cell communication of bacteria confined in beads on our millifluid chip.
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|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=300px|id=video2|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/1/18/ETH_Zurich_2014_two_wells_liquid_culture_small.mp4</html>}}
|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=300px|id=video2|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/1/18/ETH_Zurich_2014_two_wells_liquid_culture_small.mp4</html>}}
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|'''Video 1 The very first diffusion experiment with fluorescent highlighter ink (pyranine).''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with LB agar. About 5 μL ink were added in a punched whole on one side of the two wells. ~4500x faster than real-time.
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|'''Video 1 The very first diffusion experiment with fluorescent highlighter ink ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyranine pyranine]).''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/protocols#LB_medium_from_dehydrated_product LB agar]. About 5 μL ink were added in a punched whole on one side of the two wells. ~4500x faster than real-time.
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|'''Video 2 Diffusion experiment with liquid cultures.''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with LB medium, separated by solidified 2% agarose in the channel. The bottom well contained 3OC6-HSL, the top well ''E. coli'' cells with sfGFP under the control of pLux. ~4500x faster than real-time.
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|'''Video 2 Diffusion experiment with liquid cultures.''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/protocols#LB_medium_from_dehydrated_product LB medium], separated by solidified 2% agarose in the channel. The bottom well contained 3OC6-HSL (~1 mM), the top well ''E. coli'' cells with sfGFP under the control of pLux. ~4500x faster than real-time.
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|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=300px|id=video3|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/7/7d/ETH_Zurich_2014_AHL_bead_sensor_bead.mp4</html>}}
|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=300px|id=video3|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/7/7d/ETH_Zurich_2014_AHL_bead_sensor_bead.mp4</html>}}
|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=300px|id=video4|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/8/8c/ETH_Zurich_2014_sender_receiver_beads_small.mp4</html>}}
|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=300px|id=video4|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/8/8c/ETH_Zurich_2014_sender_receiver_beads_small.mp4</html>}}
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|'''Video 3  Diffusion experiment with alginate beads in defined liquid medium.''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with CB medium. The bottom well contained beads with 3OC6-HSL, the top well ''E. coli'' cells with sfGFP under the control of pLux confined in alginate beads (d=3 mm). ~1850x faster than real-time.
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|'''Video 3  Diffusion experiment with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads] in defined liquid medium.''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with CB medium. The bottom well contained beads with 3OC6-HSL (~1 mM), the top well ''E. coli'' cells with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/sequences#Sensor_Constructs sfGFP under the control of pLux] confined in [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads] (d=3 mm, intially 10<sup>7</sup> cell/beads). ~1850x faster than real-time.
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|'''Video 4 Cell communication experiment with alginate beads in defined liquid medium.''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with CB medium. The bottom well contained ''E. coli'' cells expressing LuxI, which catalyzes the production of 3OC6-HSL; the top well contained ''E. coli'' cells with sfGFP under the control of pLux, All cells were confined in alginate beads (d=3 mm). ~3450x faster than real-time.
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|'''Video 4 Cell communication experiment with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads] in defined liquid medium.''' The wells of the PDMS chip were filled with CB medium. The bottom well contained ''E. coli'' [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/sequences#Producer_Constructs cells expressing LuxI], which catalyzes the production of 3OC6-HSL; the top well contained ''E. coli'' cells with [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/sequences#Sensor_Constructs sfGFP under the control of pLux]. All cells were confined in [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads] (d=3 mm, intially 10<sup>7</sup> cell/beads). ~3450x faster than real-time.
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|colspan="2"|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=600px|id=video5|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/a9/ETH_Zurich_2014_signal_propagation.mp4</html>}}
|colspan="2"|{{:Team:ETH_Zurich/Templates/Video|width=600px|id=video5|ratio=143/100|srcMP4=<html>https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/a9/ETH_Zurich_2014_signal_propagation.mp4</html>}}
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|colspan="2"|'''Video 5''' text5
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|colspan="2"|'''Video 5 Row wise, self-propagating [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/project/background/biotools#Quorum_Sensing cell-to-cell communication] of ''E. coli'' cells confined in [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/bead alginate beads] (d=3 mm, intially 10<sup>7</sup> cell/beads) on a [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/lab/chip custom-made millifluidic PDMS chip].''' All cells contained [https://2014.igem.org/Team:ETH_Zurich/expresults/rr#Riboregulators riboregulated] sfGFP followed by [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_C0161 LuxI (BBa_C0161)] together under the control of the [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_R0062 pLux promoter (BBa_R0062)], and [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_J23100 constitutively (BBa_J23100)] expressed [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_C0062 LuxR (BBa_C0062)]. LuxI catalyzes the production of the autoinducer 3OC6-HSL, which is then diffusing from cell to cell. For initialization, the cells in one bead of the top row were induced with 3OC6-HSL before encapsulation. 1750x faster than real-time, the video starts 7 h after the initiation of the experiment.
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Latest revision as of 03:27, 18 October 2014

iGEM ETH Zurich 2014