Publications Tissue Mechanobiology Division

2011

Magnetic micropillars as a tool to govern substrate deformations

Jimmy le Digabel, Nicolas Biais, Jerome Fresnais, Jean-Francois Berret, Pascal Hersen, Benoit Ladoux

Lab on a Chip 11 (15) 2630-2636 (2011) | Journal

Magnetic actuated microdevices can be used to achieve several complex functions in microfluidics and microfabricated devices. For example, magnetic mixers and magnetic actuators have been proposed to help handling fluids at a small scale. Here, we present a strategy to create magnetically actuated micropillar arrays. We combined microfabrication techniques and the dispersion of magnetic aggregates embedded inside polymeric matrices to design micrometre scale magnetic features. By creating a magnetic field gradient in the vicinity of the substrate, well-defined forces were applied on these magnetic aggregates which in turn induced a deflection of the micropillars. By dispersing either spherical aggregates or magnetic nanowires into the gels, we can induce synchronized motions of a group of pillars or the movement of isolated pillars under a magnetic field gradient. When combined with microfabrication processes, this versatile tool leads to local as well as global substrate actuations within a range of dimensions that are relevant for microfluidics and biological applications.

BIOPHYSICS Push it, pull it

Pascal Hersen, Benoit Ladoux

Nature 470 (7334) 340-341 (2011) | Journal

During migration, cells interact with their environment by exerting mechanical forces on it. A combination of two techniques shows that they do so in all three dimensions by a push-pull mechanism.

Running Worms: C. elegans Self-Sorting by Electrotaxis

Xavier Maniere, Felix Lebois, Ivan Matic, Benoit Ladoux, Jean-Marc Di Meglio, Pascal Hersen

PLOS ONE 6 (2) e16637 (2011) | Journal | PDF

The nematode C. elegans displays complex dynamical behaviors that are commonly used to identify relevant phenotypes. Although its maintenance is straightforward, sorting large populations of worms when looking for a behavioral phenotype is difficult, time consuming and hardly quantitative when done manually. Interestingly, when submitted to a moderate electric field, worms move steadily along straight trajectories. Here, we report an inexpensive method to measure worms crawling velocities and sort them within a few minutes by taking advantage of their electrotactic skills. This method allows to quantitatively measure the effect of mutations and aging on worm's crawling velocity. We also show that worms with different locomotory phenotypes can be spatially sorted, fast worms traveling away from slow ones. Group of nematodes with comparable locomotory fitness could then be isolated for further analysis. C. elegans is a growing model for neurodegenerative diseases and using electrotaxis for self-sorting can improve the high-throughput search of therapeutic bio-molecules.

Contact

Tissue Mechanobiology Division
Prof. Benoît Ladoux
Principal Investigator

Max-Planck-Zentrum für Physik und Medizin
Kussmaulallee 2
91054 Erlangen, Germany

benoit.ladoux@mpzpm.mpg.de

+49 9131 8284 650

Assistant:
Martina Caliaro
martina.caliaro@fau.de

 

 

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