Hanie Yousefi


Curriculum vitae


Postdoctoral Fellow

Chan Zuckerberg Biohub



Plasma-induced covalent immobilization and patterning of bioactive species in microfluidic devices.


Journal article


A. Shakeri, Sara M. Imani, E. Chen, Hanie Yousefi, Raed Shabbir, T. Didar
Lab on a Chip, 2019

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Shakeri, A., Imani, S. M., Chen, E., Yousefi, H., Shabbir, R., & Didar, T. (2019). Plasma-induced covalent immobilization and patterning of bioactive species in microfluidic devices. Lab on a Chip.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Shakeri, A., Sara M. Imani, E. Chen, Hanie Yousefi, Raed Shabbir, and T. Didar. “Plasma-Induced Covalent Immobilization and Patterning of Bioactive Species in Microfluidic Devices.” Lab on a Chip (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Shakeri, A., et al. “Plasma-Induced Covalent Immobilization and Patterning of Bioactive Species in Microfluidic Devices.” Lab on a Chip, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2019a,
  title = {Plasma-induced covalent immobilization and patterning of bioactive species in microfluidic devices.},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Lab on a Chip},
  author = {Shakeri, A. and Imani, Sara M. and Chen, E. and Yousefi, Hanie and Shabbir, Raed and Didar, T.}
}

Abstract

Here, we present a straightforward technique to create bio-functional microfluidic channels using CO2 plasma to induce both carboxylic and hydroxyl groups onto the channel surface. Consequently, not only does the surface allow for irreversible covalent bonding to an oxygen plasma treated PDMS for microfluidic device fabrication, but it also provides functionality for biomolecular immobilization. Furthermore, we demonstrate integration of this technique with microcontact printing to covalently micropattern functional biomolecules inside microfluidic channels. The bio-functionality and efficacy of the microcontact printed antibodies is demonstrated for both bioassays as well as patterning and culturing different cell lines. Results show that the introduced method can be an excellent candidate for cell culture studies in microfluidics. With the new printing method, full cell confluency (∼400 cells per mm2) was achieved after incubation for only 1 day, which is significantly greater than other conventional cell culture techniques inside microfluidic devices. As a proof of concept, we demonstrated the endothelial cells functionality by stimulating von Willebrand Factor secretion under shear stress. This is done via perfusion of histamine through the channel and performing immunofluorescence labeling to observe the inflammatory response of the cells. The developed method eliminates the need for wet chemistry and significantly simplifies producing bio-functional chips which can be used for biosensing, organs-on-chips and tissue engineering applications.


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