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Title: | HeLa cell transfection using a novel sonoporation system |
Authors: | Rodamporn S. Harris N.R. Beeby S.P. Boltryk R.J. Sanchez-Elsner T. |
Keywords: | At resonance Cell transfection Cell viability Chamber design HeLa cell High rate Material thickness PZT Resonant frequencies sonoporation ultrasonic standing wave Ultrasonic standing waves Drug delivery Elastic waves Gene therapy Genetic engineering Natural frequencies Regression analysis Transducers Ultrasonic waves Waves Ultrasonics plasmid DNA article cell viability controlled study female genetic transfection HeLa cell human human cell human cell culture ionization chamber piezoelectric transducer piezoelectricity plasmid sonoporation transducer ultrasound Electroporation Equipment Design Equipment Failure Analysis Hela Cells Humans Microfluidic Analytical Techniques Sonication Transfection |
Issue Date: | 2011 |
Abstract: | Sonoporation has been shown to have an important role in biotechnology for gene therapy and drug delivery. This paper presents a novel microfluidic sonoporation system that achieves high rates of cell transfection and cell viability by operating the sonoporation chamber at resonance. The paper presents a theoretical analysis of the resonant sonoporation chamber design, which achieves sonoporation by forming an ultrasonic standing wave across the chamber. A piezoelectric transducer (PZT 26) is used to generate the ultrasound and the different material thicknesses have been identified to give a chamber resonance at 980 kHz. The efficiency of the sonoporation system was determined experimentally under a range of sonoporation conditions and different exposures time (5, 10, 15, and 20 s, respectively) using HeLa cells and plasmid (peGFP-N1). The experimental results achieve a cell transfection efficiency of 68.9% (analysis of variance, ANOVA, p lt; 0.05) at the resonant frequency of 980 kHz at 100 Vp-p (19.5 MPa) with a cell viability of 77% after 10 s of insonication. © 2011 IEEE. |
URI: | https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/14547 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79952934869&doi=10.1109%2fTBME.2010.2089521&partnerID=40&md5=229e84345021a76604100d233fc834b6 |
ISSN: | 189294 |
Appears in Collections: | Scopus 1983-2021 |
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