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  • Direct quantification of tr...
    van der Helm, Marinke W.; Odijk, Mathieu; Frimat, Jean-Philippe; van der Meer, Andries D.; Eijkel, Jan C.T.; van den Berg, Albert; Segerink, Loes I.

    Biosensors & bioelectronics, 11/2016, Letnik: 85
    Journal Article

    Measuring transendothelial or transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) is a widely used method to monitor cellular barrier tightness in organs-on-chips. Unfortunately, integrated electrodes close to the cellular barrier hamper visual inspection of the cells or require specialized cleanroom processes to fabricate see-through electrodes. Out-of-view electrodes inserted into the chip's outlets are influenced by the fluid-filled microchannels with relatively high resistance. In this case, small changes in temperature or medium composition strongly affect the apparent TEER. To solve this, we propose a simple and universally applicable method to directly determine the TEER in microfluidic organs-on-chips without the need for integrated electrodes close to the cellular barrier. Using four electrodes inserted into two channels – two on each side of the porous membrane – and six different measurement configurations we can directly derive the isolated TEER independent of channel properties. We show that this method removes large variation of non-biological origin in chips filled with culture medium. Furthermore, we demonstrate the use of our method by quantifying the TEER of a monolayer of human hCMEC/D3 cerebral endothelial cells, mimicking the blood-brain barrier inside our microfluidic organ-on-chip device. We found stable TEER values of 22 Ω cm2±1.3 Ω cm2 (average ± standard error of the mean of 4 chips), comparable to other TEER values reported for hCMEC/D3 cells in well-established Transwell systems. In conclusion, we demonstrate a simple and robust way to directly determine TEER that is applicable to any organ-on-chip device with two channels separated by a membrane. This enables stable and easily applicable TEER measurements without the need for specialized cleanroom processes and with visibility on the measured cell layer. •Cell barriers are often quantified by transendothelial electrical resistance.•In organs-on-chips, fluid-filled microchannels are included in the measured path.•Non-biological changes in are often wrongly interpreted as changes in TEER.•We present a simple and universally applicable method to determine the TEER.•The applicability of this method was shown in a blood-brain barrier on chip.