Self-Assembled Hexagonal Superparamagnetic Cone Structures for Fabrication of Cell Cluster Arrays

Yinling Chen, Zhixin Hu, Dongyang Zhao, Kejia Zhou, Zhenyu Huang, Wuduo Zhao, Xiaonan Yang, Chaojun Gao, Yangjie Cao, Yenya Hsu, Weijen Chang, Zonhan Wei, Xiaoxi Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In this study, we demonstrated that arrays of cell clusters can be fabricated by self-assembled hexagonal superparamagnetic cone structures. When a strong out-of-plane magnetic field was applied to the ferrofluid on a glass substrate, it will induce the magnetic poles on the upper/lower surfaces of the continuous ferrofluid to increase the magnetostatic energy. The ferrofluid will then experience hydrodynamic instability and be split into small droplets with cone structures because of the compromising surface tension energy and magnetostatic energy to minimize the system's total energy. Furthermore, the ferrofluid cones were orderly self-assembled into hexagonal arrays to reach the lowest energy state. After dehydration of these liquid cones to form solid cones, polydimethylsiloxane was cast to fix the arrangement of hexagonal superparamagnetic cone structures and prevent the leakage of magnetic nanoparticles. The U-343 human neuronal glioblastoma cells were labeled with magnetic nanoparticles through endocytosis in co-culture with a ferrofluid. The number of magnetic nanoparticles internalized was (4.2 ± 0.84) × 106 per cell by the cell magnetophoresis analysis. These magnetically labeled cells were attracted and captured by hexagonal superparamagnetic cone structures to form cell cluster arrays. As a function of the solid cone size, the number of cells captured by each hexagonal superparamagnetic cone structure was increased from 48 to 126 under a 2000 G out-of-plane magnetic field. The local magnetic field gradient of the hexagonal superparamagnetic cone was 117.0-140.9 G/mm from the cell magnetophoresis. When an external magnetic field was applied, we observed that the number of protrusions of the cell edge decreased from the fluorescence images. It showed that the local magnetic field gradient caused by the hexagonal superparamagnetic cones restricted the cell growth and migration.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10667-10673
Number of pages7
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume13
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021 Mar 10

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General Materials Science

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