Three‐dimensional, label‐free cell viability measurements in tissue engineering scaffolds using optical coherence tomography

Author:

Babakhanova Greta1,Agrawal Anant2,Arora Deepika1,Horenberg Allison1,Budhathoki Jagat B.3,Dunkers Joy P.1,Chalfoun Joe4,Bajcsy Peter4,Simon Carl G.1

Affiliation:

1. Biosystems and Biomaterials Division National Institute of Standards and Technology Gaithersburg Maryland USA

2. Center for Devices and Radiological Health Food and Drug Administration Silver Spring Maryland USA

3. Laboratory of Molecular Biology, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases National Institutes of Health Bethesda Maryland USA

4. Software and Systems Division National Institute of Standards and Technology Gaithersburg Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractIn the field of tissue engineering, 3D scaffolds and cells are often combined to yield constructs that are used as therapeutics to repair or restore tissue function in patients. Viable cells are often required to achieve the intended mechanism of action for the therapy, where the live cells may build new tissue or may release factors that induce tissue regeneration. Thus, there is a need to reliably measure cell viability in 3D scaffolds as a quality attribute of a tissue‐engineered medical product. Here, we developed a noninvasive, label‐free, 3D optical coherence tomography (OCT) method to rapidly (2.5 min) image large sample volumes (1 mm3) to assess cell viability and distribution within scaffolds. OCT imaging was assessed using a model scaffold‐cell system consisting of a polysaccharide‐based hydrogel seeded with human Jurkat cells. Four test systems were used: hydrogel seeded with live cells, hydrogel seeded with heat‐shocked or fixed dead cells and hydrogel without any cells. Time series OCT images demonstrated changes in the time‐dependent speckle patterns due to refractive index (RI) variations within live cells that were not observed for pure hydrogel samples or hydrogels with dead cells. The changes in speckle patterns were used to generate live‐cell contrast by image subtraction. In this way, objects with large changes in RI were binned as live cells. Using this approach, on average, OCT imaging measurements counted 326 ± 52 live cells per 0.288 mm3 for hydrogels that were seeded with 288 live cells (as determined by the acridine orange‐propidium iodide cell counting method prior to seeding cells in gels). Considering the substantial uncertainties in fabricating the scaffold‐cell constructs, such as the error from pipetting and counting cells, a 13% difference in the live‐cell count is reasonable. Additionally, the 3D distribution of live cells was mapped within a hydrogel scaffold to assess the uniformity of their distribution across the volume. Our results demonstrate a real‐time, noninvasive method to rapidly assess the spatial distribution of live cells within a 3D scaffold that could be useful for assessing tissue‐engineered medical products.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Metals and Alloys,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials,Ceramics and Composites

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