Cargando…

Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode

Intracellular pressure, a key physical parameter of the intracellular environment, has been found to regulate multiple cell physiological activities and impact cell micromanipulation results. The intracellular pressure may reveal the mechanism of these cells’ physiological activities or improve the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Li, Minghui, Qiu, Jinyu, Li, Ruimin, Liu, Yuzhu, Du, Yue, Liu, Yaowei, Sun, Mingzhu, Zhao, Xin, Zhao, Qili
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10222863/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37430885
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23104973
_version_ 1785049802375954432
author Li, Minghui
Qiu, Jinyu
Li, Ruimin
Liu, Yuzhu
Du, Yue
Liu, Yaowei
Sun, Mingzhu
Zhao, Xin
Zhao, Qili
author_facet Li, Minghui
Qiu, Jinyu
Li, Ruimin
Liu, Yuzhu
Du, Yue
Liu, Yaowei
Sun, Mingzhu
Zhao, Xin
Zhao, Qili
author_sort Li, Minghui
collection PubMed
description Intracellular pressure, a key physical parameter of the intracellular environment, has been found to regulate multiple cell physiological activities and impact cell micromanipulation results. The intracellular pressure may reveal the mechanism of these cells’ physiological activities or improve the micro-manipulation accuracy for cells. The involvement of specialized and expensive devices and the significant damage to cell viability that the current intracellular pressure measurement methods cause significantly limit their wide applications. This paper proposes a robotic intracellular pressure measurement method using a traditional micropipette electrode system setup. First, the measured resistance of the micropipette inside the culture medium is modeled to analyze its variation trend when the pressure inside the micropipette increases. Then, the concentration of KCl solution filled inside the micropipette electrode that is suitable for intracellular pressure measurement is determined according to the tested electrode resistance–pressure relationship; 1 mol/L KCl solution is our final choice. Further, the measurement resistance of the micropipette electrode inside the cell is modeled to measure the intracellular pressure through the difference in key pressure before and after the release of the intracellular pressure. Based on the above work, a robotic measurement procedure of the intracellular pressure is established based on a traditional micropipette electrode system. The experimental results on porcine oocytes demonstrate that the proposed method can operate on cells at an average speed of 20~40 cells/day with measurement efficiency comparable to the related work. The average repeated error of the relationship between the measured electrode resistance and the pressure inside the micropipette electrode is less than 5%, and no observable intracellular pressure leakage was found during the measurement process, both guaranteeing the measurement accuracy of intracellular pressure. The measured results of the porcine oocytes are in accordance with those reported in related work. Moreover, a 90% survival rate of operated oocytes was obtained after measurement, proving limited damage to cell viability. Our method does not rely on expensive instruments and is conducive to promotion in daily laboratories.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10222863
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-102228632023-05-28 Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode Li, Minghui Qiu, Jinyu Li, Ruimin Liu, Yuzhu Du, Yue Liu, Yaowei Sun, Mingzhu Zhao, Xin Zhao, Qili Sensors (Basel) Article Intracellular pressure, a key physical parameter of the intracellular environment, has been found to regulate multiple cell physiological activities and impact cell micromanipulation results. The intracellular pressure may reveal the mechanism of these cells’ physiological activities or improve the micro-manipulation accuracy for cells. The involvement of specialized and expensive devices and the significant damage to cell viability that the current intracellular pressure measurement methods cause significantly limit their wide applications. This paper proposes a robotic intracellular pressure measurement method using a traditional micropipette electrode system setup. First, the measured resistance of the micropipette inside the culture medium is modeled to analyze its variation trend when the pressure inside the micropipette increases. Then, the concentration of KCl solution filled inside the micropipette electrode that is suitable for intracellular pressure measurement is determined according to the tested electrode resistance–pressure relationship; 1 mol/L KCl solution is our final choice. Further, the measurement resistance of the micropipette electrode inside the cell is modeled to measure the intracellular pressure through the difference in key pressure before and after the release of the intracellular pressure. Based on the above work, a robotic measurement procedure of the intracellular pressure is established based on a traditional micropipette electrode system. The experimental results on porcine oocytes demonstrate that the proposed method can operate on cells at an average speed of 20~40 cells/day with measurement efficiency comparable to the related work. The average repeated error of the relationship between the measured electrode resistance and the pressure inside the micropipette electrode is less than 5%, and no observable intracellular pressure leakage was found during the measurement process, both guaranteeing the measurement accuracy of intracellular pressure. The measured results of the porcine oocytes are in accordance with those reported in related work. Moreover, a 90% survival rate of operated oocytes was obtained after measurement, proving limited damage to cell viability. Our method does not rely on expensive instruments and is conducive to promotion in daily laboratories. MDPI 2023-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10222863/ /pubmed/37430885 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23104973 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Li, Minghui
Qiu, Jinyu
Li, Ruimin
Liu, Yuzhu
Du, Yue
Liu, Yaowei
Sun, Mingzhu
Zhao, Xin
Zhao, Qili
Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode
title Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode
title_full Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode
title_fullStr Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode
title_full_unstemmed Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode
title_short Robotic Intracellular Pressure Measurement Using Micropipette Electrode
title_sort robotic intracellular pressure measurement using micropipette electrode
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10222863/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37430885
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23104973
work_keys_str_mv AT liminghui roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT qiujinyu roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT liruimin roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT liuyuzhu roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT duyue roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT liuyaowei roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT sunmingzhu roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT zhaoxin roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode
AT zhaoqili roboticintracellularpressuremeasurementusingmicropipetteelectrode