Thermo-controlled microfluidic generation of monodisperse alginate microspheres based on external gelation†
Abstract
Droplet-based microfluidic systems have received much attention as promising tools for fabricating monodisperse microspheres of alginate solutions with high accuracy and reproducibility. The immediate and simple ionotropic gelation of alginate, its biocompatibility, and its tunability of mechanical properties make it a favorable hydrogel in the biomedical and tissue engineering fields. In these fields, micron-sized alginate hydrogel spheres have shown high potential as cell vehicles and drug delivery systems. Although on-chip microfluidic gelation of the produced alginate droplets is common, several challenges remain. Complicated chemical and microfabrication processes are required, and the risk of microchannel clogging is high. In the current study, we present an easy-to-use microfluidic external gelation process to produce highly spherical and monodisperse microspheres from very low-concentrated alginate-RGD solution [0.5% (w/v)]. To accomplish this, gelatin, a thermo-sensitive and inexpensive biomaterial, was incorporated into the alginate solution as a sacrificial biomaterial that mediates the off-chip external gelation of the alginate with Ca2+, and avoids droplet coalescence. Utilizing the methodology mentioned above, we successfully generated monodisperse alginate microspheres (AMs) with diameters ranging from 27 μm to 46 μm, with a coefficient of variation of 0.14, from a mixture of Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-modified very low viscosity alginate and gelatin. These RGD-AMs were used as microcarriers for human umbilical vein endothelial cells. The described easy-to-use and cost-effective microfluidic off-chip external gelation strategy exhibits comparable advantages to on-chip external gelation and demonstrates superiority over the latter since clogging is impossible.