<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Rothbauer, M., Zirath, H., & Ertl, P. (2018). Recent advances in microfluidic technologies for cell-to-cell interaction studies. <i>Lab on a Chip</i>. https://doi.org/10.1039/C7LC00815E</div>
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Microfluidic cell cultures are ideally positioned to become the next generation of in vitro diagnostic tools for biomedical research, where key biological processes such as cell signalling and dynamic cell-to-cell interactions can be reliably analysed under reproducible physiological cell culture conditions. In the last decade, a large number of microfluidic cell analysis systems have been developed for a variety of applications including drug target optimization, drug screening and toxicological testing. More recently, advanced in vitro microfluidic cell culture systems have emerged that are capable of replicating the complex three-dimensional architectures of tissues and organs and thus represent valid biological models for investigating the mechanism and function of human tissue structures, as well as studying the onset and progression of diseases such as cancer. In this review, we present the most important developments in single-cell, 2D and 3D microfluidic cell culture systems for studying cell-to-cell interactions published over the last 6 years, with a focus on cancer research and immunotherapy, vascular models and neuroscience. In addition, the current technological development of microdevices with more advanced physiological cell microenvironments that integrate multiple organ models, namely, the so-called body-, human- and multi-organ-on-a-chip, is reviewed.
en
dc.description.sponsorship
European Union's Horizon 2020
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dc.description.sponsorship
Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG)
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dc.language
English
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dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
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dc.relation.ispartof
Lab on a Chip
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dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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dc.subject
Microfluidic cell culture system
en
dc.title
Recent advances in microfluidic technologies for cell-to-cell interaction studies
en
dc.type
Article
en
dc.type
Artikel
de
dc.rights.license
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
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Creative Commons Namensnennung 3.0 Unported
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dc.relation.grantno
685817
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dc.relation.grantno
849791
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dcterms.dateSubmitted
2017-08-02
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Review Article
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true
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true
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dcterms.isPartOf.title
Lab on a Chip
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E164 - Institut für Chemische Technologien und Analytik
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tuw.publication.orgunit
E163 - Institut für Angewandte Synthesechemie
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tuw.publisher.doi
10.1039/C7LC00815E
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dc.date.onlinefirst
2017-10-31
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dc.identifier.eissn
1473-0189
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AC15334425
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dc.identifier.urn
urn:nbn:at:at-ubtuw:3-5349
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0000-0002-9928-3631
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0000-0001-7772-4099
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0000-0002-7625-2445
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CC BY 3.0
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CC BY 3.0
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en
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review article
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open
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with Fulltext
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Publications
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http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bc
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Open Access
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crisitem.author.dept
E163-03-1 - Forschungsgruppe Cell Chip
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crisitem.author.dept
E163-03-1 - Forschungsgruppe Cell Chip
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crisitem.author.dept
E610 - Vizerektorat Forschung und Innovation
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0000-0002-7625-2445
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E163-03 - Forschungsbereich Organische und Biologische Chemie
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E163-03 - Forschungsbereich Organische und Biologische Chemie