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Karlsruhe Research Centre

3 ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN JoVE

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Biology

Chip-based Three-dimensional Cell Culture in Perfused Micro-bioreactors
Eric Gottwald 1, Brigitte Lahni 1, David Thiele 1, Stefan Giselbrecht 1, Alexander Welle 1, Karl-Friedrich Weibezahn 1
1Institute for Biological Interfaces, Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe

We describe a chip-based platform for the three-dimensional cultivation of cells in micro-bioreactors. One chip can house up to 10 Mio. cells that can be cultivated under precisely defined conditions with regard to fluid flow, oxygen tension etc. in a sterile, closed circulation loop.

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Biology

Microfabrication of Chip-sized Scaffolds for Three-dimensional Cell cultivation
Stefan Giselbrecht 1, Eric Gottwald 1, Roman Truckenmueller 2, Christina Trautmann 3, Alexander Welle 1, Andreas Guber 4, Volker Saile 4, Thomas Gietzelt 5, Karl-Friedrich Weibezahn 1
1Institute for Biological Interfaces, Karlsruhe Research Centre, 2Institute for BioMedical Technology, University of Twente, 3Department of Materials Research, Institute for Heavy Ion Research, 4Institute of Microstructure Technology, Karlsruhe Research Centre, 5Institute for Micro Process Engineering, Karlsruhe Research Centre

We present two processes for the microfabrication of porous polymer chips for three-dimensional cell cultivation. The first one is hot embossing combined with a solvent vapour welding process. The second one uses a recently developed microthermoforming process combined with ion track technology leading to a significant simplification of manufacture.

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Biology

Interview: Bioreactors and Surfaced-Modified 3D-Scaffolds for Stem Cell Research
Karl-Friedrich Weibezahn 1
1Institute for Biological Interfaces, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

In the past many in vitro culture systems -- mainly monolayer cultures -- often suffered from the disadvantage that differentiated primary cells had a relatively short life-span and de-differentiated during culture. As a consequence, most of their organ-specific functions were lost rapidly. Thus, in order to reproduce better conditions for these cells in vitro, modifications and adaptations have been made to conventional monolayer cultures.

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