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Dive into the research topics where Athanasia E. Christakou is active.

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Featured researches published by Athanasia E. Christakou.


Lab on a Chip | 2010

Ultrasound-controlled cell aggregation in a multi-well chip

Bruno Vanherberghen; Otto Manneberg; Athanasia E. Christakou; Thomas Frisk; Mathias Ohlin; Hans M. Hertz; Björn Önfelt; Martin Wiklund

We demonstrate a microplate platform for parallelized manipulation of particles or cells by frequency-modulated ultrasound. The device, consisting of a silicon-glass microchip and a single ultrasonic transducer, enables aggregation, positioning and high-resolution microscopy of cells distributed in an array of 100 microwells centered on the microchip. We characterize the system in terms of temperature control, aggregation and positioning efficiency, and cell viability. We use time-lapse imaging to show that cells continuously exposed to ultrasound are able to divide and remain viable for at least 12 hours inside the device. Thus, the device can be used to induce and maintain aggregation in a parallelized fashion, facilitating long-term microscopy studies of, e.g., cell-cell interactions.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Imaging Immune Surveillance of Individual Natural Killer Cells Confined in Microwell Arrays

Karolin Guldevall; Bruno Vanherberghen; Thomas Frisk; Johan Hurtig; Athanasia E. Christakou; Otto Manneberg; Sara Lindström; Helene Andersson-Svahn; Martin Wiklund; Björn Önfelt

New markers are constantly emerging that identify smaller and smaller subpopulations of immune cells. However, there is a growing awareness that even within very small populations, there is a marked functional heterogeneity and that measurements at the population level only gives an average estimate of the behaviour of that pool of cells. New techniques to analyze single immune cells over time are needed to overcome this limitation. For that purpose, we have designed and evaluated microwell array systems made from two materials, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and silicon, for high-resolution imaging of individual natural killer (NK) cell responses. Both materials were suitable for short-term studies (<4 hours) but only silicon wells allowed long-term studies (several days). Time-lapse imaging of NK cell cytotoxicity in these microwell arrays revealed that roughly 30% of the target cells died much more rapidly than the rest upon NK cell encounter. This unexpected heterogeneity may reflect either separate mechanisms of killing or different killing efficiency by individual NK cells. Furthermore, we show that high-resolution imaging of inhibitory synapse formation, defined by clustering of MHC class I at the interface between NK and target cells, is possible in these microwells. We conclude that live cell imaging of NK-target cell interactions in multi-well microstructures are possible. The technique enables novel types of assays and allow data collection at a level of resolution not previously obtained. Furthermore, due to the large number of wells that can be simultaneously imaged, new statistical information is obtained that will lead to a better understanding of the function and regulation of the immune system at the single cell level.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Laboratory cryo soft X-ray microscopy

Hans M. Hertz; O. von Hofsten; Michael Bertilson; Ulrich Vogt; Anders Holmberg; Julia Reinspach; D. H. Martz; M. Selin; Athanasia E. Christakou; Joel Jerlstrom-Hultqvist; Staffan G. Svärd

Lens-based water-window X-ray microscopy allows two- and three-dimensional (2D and 3D) imaging of intact unstained cells in their near-native state with unprecedented contrast and resolution. Cryofixation is essential to avoid radiation damage to the sample. Present cryo X-ray microscopes rely on synchrotron radiation sources, thereby limiting the accessibility for a wider community of biologists. In the present paper we demonstrate water-window cryo X-ray microscopy with a laboratory-source-based arrangement. The microscope relies on a λ=2.48-nm liquid-jet high-brightness laser-plasma source, normal-incidence multilayer condenser optics, 30-nm zone-plate optics, and a cryo sample chamber. We demonstrate 2D imaging of test patterns, and intact unstained yeast, protozoan parasites and mammalian cells. Overview 3D information is obtained by stereo imaging while complete 3D microscopy is provided by full tomographic reconstruction. The laboratory microscope image quality approaches that of the synchrotron microscopes, but with longer exposure times. The experimental image quality is analyzed from a numerical wave-propagation model of the imaging system and a path to reach synchrotron-like exposure times in laboratory microscopy is outlined.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2012

Novel Microchip-Based Tools Facilitating Live Cell Imaging and Assessment of Functional Heterogeneity within NK Cell Populations

Elin Forslund; Karolin Guldevall; Per E. Olofsson; Thomas Frisk; Athanasia E. Christakou; Martin Wiklund; Björn Önfelt

Each individual has a heterogeneous pool of NK cells consisting of cells that may be specialized towards specific functional responses such as secretion of cytokines or killing of tumor cells. Many conventional methods are not fit to characterize heterogeneous populations as they measure the average response of all cells. Thus, there is a need for experimental platforms that provide single cell resolution. In addition, there are transient and stochastic variations in functional responses at the single cell level, calling for methods that allow studies of many events over extended periods of time. This paper presents a versatile microchip platform enabling long-term microscopic studies of individual NK cells interacting with target cells. Each microchip contains an array of microwells, optimized for medium or high-resolution time-lapse imaging of single or multiple NK and target cells, or for screening of thousands of isolated NK-target cell interactions. Individual NK cells confined with target cells in small microwells is a suitable setup for high-content screening and rapid assessment of heterogeneity within populations, while microwells of larger dimensions are appropriate for studies of NK cell migration and sequential interactions with multiple target cells. By combining the chip technology with ultrasonic manipulation, NK and target cells can be forced to interact and positioned with high spatial accuracy within individual microwells. This setup effectively and synchronously creates NK-target conjugates at hundreds of parallel positions in the microchip. Thus, this facilitates assessment of temporal aspects of NK-target cell interactions, e.g., conjugation, immune synapse formation, and cytotoxic events. The microchip platform presented here can be used to effectively address questions related to fundamental functions of NK cells that can lead to better understanding of how the behavior of individual cells add up to give a functional response at the population level.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2016

NK cells converge lytic granules to promote cytotoxicity and prevent bystander killing

Hsiang-Ting Hsu; Emily M. Mace; Alexandre F. Carisey; Dixita I. Viswanath; Athanasia E. Christakou; Martin Wiklund; Björn Önfelt; Jordan S. Orange

Lytic granule convergence to the MTOC prepares NK cells for cytotoxic effector function. Hsu et al. demonstrate that convergence increases specificity in directed secretion, thereby preventing bystander killing.


Optics Letters | 2011

Laboratory soft-x-ray microscope for cryotomography of biological specimens

Michael Bertilson; Olov von Hofsten; Ulrich Vogt; Anders Holmberg; Athanasia E. Christakou; Hans M. Hertz

Soft-x-ray cryotomography allows quantitative and high-resolution three-dimensional imaging of intact unstained cells. To date, the method relies on synchrotron-radiation sources, which limits accessibility for researchers. Here we present a laboratory water-window microscope for cryotomography. It is based on a λ=2.48 nm liquid-jet laser-plasma source, a normal-incidence multilayer condenser, a 30 nm zone-plate objective, and a cryotilt sample holder. We demonstrate high-resolution imaging, as well as quantitative tomographic imaging, of frozen intact cells. The reconstructed tomogram of the intracellular local absorption coefficient shows details down to ∼100 nm.


Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering | 2013

Influence of acoustic streaming on ultrasonic particle manipulation in a 100-well ring-transducer microplate

Mathias Ohlin; Athanasia E. Christakou; Thomas Frisk; Björn Önfelt; Martin Wiklund

We characterize and quantify the performance of ultrasonic particle aggregation and positioning in a 100-well microplate. We analyze the result when operating a planar ultrasonic ring transducer at ...


Lab on a Chip | 2015

Temperature-controlled MPa-pressure ultrasonic cell manipulation in a microfluidic chip

Mathias Ohlin; Ida Iranmanesh; Athanasia E. Christakou; Martin Wiklund

We study the temperature-independent impact on cell viability of relevant physical parameters during long-term, high-acoustic-pressure ultrasonic exposure in a microfluidic chip designed for ultrasonic-standing-wave trapping and aggregation of cells. We use a light-intensity method and 5 μm polymer beads for accurate acoustic pressure calibration before injecting cells into the device, and we monitor the viability of A549 lung cancer cells trapped during one hour in an ultrasonic standing wave with 1 MPa pressure amplitude. The microfluidic chip is actuated by a novel temperature-controlled ultrasonic transducer capable of keeping the temperature stable around 37 °C with an accuracy better than ±0.2 °C, independently on the ultrasonic power and heat produced by the system, thereby decoupling any temperature effect from other relevant effects on cells caused by the high-pressure acoustic field. We demonstrate that frequency-modulated ultrasonic actuation can produce acoustic pressures of equally high magnitudes as with single-frequency actuation, and we show that A549 lung cancer cells can be exposed to 1 MPa standing-wave acoustic pressure amplitudes for one hour without compromising cell viability. At this pressure level, we also measure the acoustic streaming induced around the trapped cell aggregate, and conclude that cell viability is not affected by streaming velocities of the order of 100 μm s(-1). Our results are important when implementing acoustophoresis methods in various clinical and biomedical applications.


Micromachines | 2014

Ultrasound-Induced Cell–Cell Interaction Studies in a Multi-Well Microplate

Martin Wiklund; Athanasia E. Christakou; Mathias Ohlin; Ida Iranmanesh; Thomas Frisk; Bruno Vanherberghen; Björn Önfelt

This review describes the use of ultrasound for inducing and retaining cell-cell contact in multi-well microplates combined with live-cell fluorescence microscopy. This platform has been used for s ...


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2013

On-chip acoustic sample preparation for cell studies and diagnostics

Martin Wiklund; Athanasia E. Christakou; Ida Iranmanesh; Mathias Ohlin; Aman Russom; Björn Önfelt

We describe a novel platform for acoustic sample preparation in microchannels and microplates. The utilized method is based on generating a multitude of acoustic resonances at a set of different frequencies in microstructures, in order to accurately control the migration and positioning of particles and cells suspended in fluid channels and chambers. The actuation frequencies range from 30 kHz to 7 MHz, which are applied simultaneously and/or in sweeps. We present two devices: A closed microfluidic chip designed for pre-alignment, size-based separation, isolation, up-concentration and lysis of cells, and an open multi-well microplate designed for parallel aggregation and positioning of cells. Both devices in the platform are compatible with high-resolution live-cell microscopy, which is used for fluorescence-based optical characterization. Two bioapplications are demonstrated for each of the devices: The first device is used for size-selective cell isolation and lysis for DNA-based diagnostics, and the second device is used for quantifying the heterogeneity in cytotoxic response of natural killer cells interacting with cancer cells.

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Martin Wiklund

Royal Institute of Technology

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Björn Önfelt

Royal Institute of Technology

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Mathias Ohlin

Royal Institute of Technology

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Thomas Frisk

Royal Institute of Technology

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Bruno Vanherberghen

Royal Institute of Technology

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Hans M. Hertz

Royal Institute of Technology

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Otto Manneberg

Royal Institute of Technology

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Anders Holmberg

Royal Institute of Technology

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Ida Iranmanesh

Royal Institute of Technology

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Karolin Guldevall

Royal Institute of Technology

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