Cells on Gels: Cell Behavior at the Air-Gel Interface

ORAL

Abstract

Numerous different types of cells are often grown at air-liquid interfaces. For example, a common way to create cell spheroids is to disperse cells in a droplet of liquid media that hangs from the lid of a culture dish -- the ``hanging drop'' method. Some types of epithelial cells form monolayers at the bottom of hanging drops, instead of spheroids. Corneal epithelial cells stratify and exhibit a tissue-like phenotype when attached to liquid permeable culture surfaces positioned at the air-liquid media interface (air-lifted culture). These widely used culture methods make experimentation challenging -- imaging through hanging drops and air-lifted culture dishes is prohibitive. However, similar results may be achieved by culturing cells on hydrogel surfaces at the air-gel interface. In this talk we will describe a method for culturing cells at air-gel interfaces. We seed human corneal epithelial cells (hTCEpi) onto the surfaces of hydrogel networks and jammed microgels, exposed to air. Preliminary observations of cell behavior at the air-gel interface will be presented.

Authors

  • Christopher O'Bryan

    University of Florida

  • Tristan Hormel

    University of Florida

  • Tapomoy Bhattacharjee

    Univ of Florida - Gainesville, University of Florida

  • Greg Sawyer

    Univ of Florida - Gainesville, University of Florida

  • Thomas Angelini

    Univ of Florida - Gainesville, University of Florida