Biotechnology Progress, Vol.20, No.3, 750-755, 2004
Microfluidic PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane) bioreactor for large-scale culture of hepatocytes
Microfluidics could provide suitable environments for cell culture because of the larger surface-to-volume ratio and fluidic behavior similar to the environments in vivo. Such microfluidic environments are now used to investigate cell-to-cell interactions and behaviors in vitro, emulating situations observed in vivo, for example, microscale blood vessels modeled by microfluidic channels. These emulated situations cannot be realized by conventional technologies. In our previous works, microfluidic channels composed of two PDMS (poly(dimethylsiloxane)) layers were successfully used for Hep G2 cell culture. To achieve physiologically meaningful functions in vitro, a culture with a larger number of cells and higher density must be performed. This will require bioreactors with larger surface areas for cell attachment and sufficient amounts of oxygen and nutrition supply. For those purposes, we fabricated a bioreactor by stacking 10 PDMS layers together, i.e., four cell culture chambers, and a chamber dedicated to the oxygen supply inserted in the middle of the 10-stacked layers. The oxygen supply chamber is separated from the microfluidic channels for the culture medium perfusion by thin 300-mum PDMS walls. The high gas permeability of PDMS allows oxygen supply to the microfluidic channels through the thin walls. On the basis of the measurement of glucose consumption and albumin production, it is shown that cellular activity exhibits a gradual increase and saturation throughout the culture. We clearly observed that in the case of the microfluidic bioreactor for large-scale cultures, the oxygen chamber is indispensable to achieve longer and healthy cultures. In the present bioreactor, the cell density was found to be about 3-4 x 10(7) cells/cm(3), which is in the same order of magnitude as the conventional macroscale bioreactors. Consequently, by stacking single culture chambers and oxygen chambers in between, we could have a scalable method to realize the microfluidic bioreactor for large-scale cultures.