Mixing and delivery of multiple controlled oxygen environments to a single multiwell culture plate

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Abstract

Precise oxygen control is critical to evaluating cell growth, molecular content, and stress response in cultured cells. We have designed, fabricated, and characterized a 96-well plate-based device that is capable of delivering eight static or dynamically changing oxygen environments to different rows on a single plate. The device incorporates a gas-mixing tree that combines two input gases to generate the eight gas mixtures that supply each row of the plate with a different gas atmosphere via a removable manifold. Using air and nitrogen as feed gases, a single 96-well plate can culture cells in applied gas atmospheres with PO2 levels ranging from 1 to 135 mmHg. Human cancer cell lines MCF-7, PANC-1, and Caco-2 were grown on a single plate under this range of oxygen levels. Only cells grown in wells exposed to PO2 ≤37 mmHg express the endogenous hypoxia markers hypoxia-inducible factor-1α and carbonic anhydrase IX. This design is amenable to multiwell plate-based molecular assays or drug dose-response studies in static or cycling hypoxia conditions.

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APA

Yao, M., Sattler, T., Rabbani, Z. N., Pulliam, T., Walker, G., & Gamcsik, M. P. (2018). Mixing and delivery of multiple controlled oxygen environments to a single multiwell culture plate. American Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology, 315(5), C766–C775. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00276.2018

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