Thomas Braschler
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas Braschler.
Advanced Materials | 2012
Kris Pataky; Thomas Braschler; Andrea Negro; Philippe Renaud; Matthias P. Lutolf; Juergen Brugger
An optimized 3D inkjet printing process is demonstrated for structuring alginate into a tissue-like microvasculature capable of supporting physiological flow rates. Optimizing the reaction at the single-droplet level enables wet hydrogel droplets to be stacked, thus overcoming their natural tendancy to spread and coalesce. Live cells can be patterned using this process and it can be extended to a range of other hydrogels.
Nature Communications | 2015
Sidi A. Bencherif; R. Warren Sands; Omar A. Ali; Weiwei A. Li; Sarah A. Lewin; Thomas Braschler; Ting-Y.S. Shih; Catia Verbeke; Deen Bhatta; Glenn Dranoff; David J. Mooney
A biomaterial-based vaccination system that uses minimal extracorporeal manipulation could provide in situ enhancement of dendritic cell (DC) numbers, a physical space where DCs interface with transplanted tumour cells, and an immunogenic context. Here we encapsulate GM-CSF, serving as a DC enhancement factor, and CpG ODN, serving as a DC activating factor, into sponge-like macroporous cryogels. These cryogels are injected subcutaneously into mice to localize transplanted tumour cells and deliver immunomodulatory factors in a controlled spatio-temporal manner. These vaccines elicit local infiltrates composed of conventional and plasmacytoid DCs, with the subsequent induction of potent, durable and specific anti-tumour T-cell responses in a melanoma model. These cryogels can be delivered in a minimally invasive manner, bypass the need for genetic modification of transplanted cancer cells and provide sustained release of immunomodulators. Altogether, these findings indicate the potential for cryogels to serve as a platform for cancer cell vaccinations.
Bioelectrochemistry | 2008
Elisabete Nascimento; Nuno Nogueira; Tiago Silva; Thomas Braschler; Nicolas Demierre; Philippe Renaud; Abel Oliva
Dielectrophoresis is a method that has demonstrated great potential in cell discrimination and isolation. In this study, the dielectrophoretic sorting of normal and Babesia bovis infected erythrocytes was performed using a microfabricated flow cytometer. Separation was possible through exploitation of the dielectric differences between normal and infected erythrocytes, essentially due to the higher ionic membrane permeability of B. bovis infected cells. Sorting experiments were performed inside a microchip made from Pt microelectrodes and SU-8 channels patterned on a glass substrate. Optimum cell separation was achieved at 4 MHz using an in vitro culture of B. bovis suspended in 63 mS/m phosphate buffer and applying a sinusoidal voltage of 15 V peak-to-peak. Normal erythrocytes experienced stronger positive dielectrophoresis (pDEP) than B. bovis infected cells, moving them closer to the microelectrodes. Under these conditions it was possible to enrich the fraction of infected cells from 7 to 50% without the need of extensive sample preparation or labelling. Throughout the experiments very few microliters of sample were used, suggesting that this system may be considered suitable for integration in a low-cost automated device to be used in the in situ diagnostic of babesiosis.
Journal of Periodontal & Implant Science | 2013
Sidi A. Bencherif; Thomas Braschler; Philippe Renaud
A paradigm shift is taking place in medicine and dentistry from using synthetic implants and tissue grafts to a tissue engineering approach that uses degradable porous three-dimensional (3D) material hydrogels integrated with cells and bioactive factors to regenerate tissues such as dental bone and other oral tissues. Hydrogels have been established as a biomaterial of choice for many years, as they offer diverse properties that make them ideal in regenerative medicine, including dental applications. Being highly biocompatible and similar to native extracellular matrix, hydrogels have emerged as ideal candidates in the design of 3D scaffolds for tissue regeneration and drug delivery applications. However, precise control over hydrogel properties, such as porosity, pore size, and pore interconnectivity, remains a challenge. Traditional techniques for creating conventional crosslinked polymers have demonstrated limited success in the formation of hydrogels with large pore size, thus limiting cellular infiltration, tissue ingrowth, vascularization, and matrix mineralization (in the case of bone) of tissue-engineered constructs. Emerging technologies have demonstrated the ability to control microarchitectural features in hydrogels such as the creation of large pore size, porosity, and pore interconnectivity, thus allowing the creation of engineered hydrogel scaffolds with a structure and function closely mimicking native tissues. In this review, we explore the various technologies available for the preparation of macroporous scaffolds and their potential applications.
Analytical Chemistry | 2011
Thomas Braschler; Ana Valero; Ludovica Colella; Kristopher Pataky; Jürgen Brugger; Philippe Renaud
We provide a common theoretical framework reuniting specific models for the Ca(2+)-alginate system and general reaction diffusion theory along with experimental validation on a microfluidic chip. As a starting point, we use a set of nonlinear, partial differential equations that are traditionally solved numerically: the Mikkelsen-Elgsaeter model. Applying the traveling-wave hypothesis as a major simplification, we obtain an analytical solution. The solution indicates that the fundamental properties of the alginate reaction front are governed by a single dimensionless parameter λ. For small λ values, a large depletion zone accompanies the reaction front. For large λ values, the alginate reacts before having the time to diffuse significantly. We show that the λ parameter is of general importance beyond the alginate model system, as it can be used to classify known solutions for second-order reaction diffusion schemes, along with the novel solution presented here. For experimental validation, we develop a microchip model system, in which the alginate gel formation can be carried out in a highly controlled, essentially 1D environment. The use of a filter barrier enables us to rapidly renew the CaCl(2) solution, while maintaining flow speeds lower than 1 μm/s for the alginate compartment. This allows one to impose an exactly known bulk CaCl(2) concentration and diffusion resistance. This experimental model system, taken together with the theoretical development, enables the determination of the entire set of physicochemical parameters governing the alginate reaction front in a single experiment.
Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2015
Amélie Béduer; Thomas Braschler; Oliver Peric; Georg E. Fantner; Sébastien Mosser; Patrick C. Fraering; Sidi A. Bencherif; David J. Mooney; Philippe Renaud
Millimeter to centimeter-sized injectable neural scaffolds based on macroporous cryogels are presented. The polymer-scaffolds are made from alginate and carboxymethyl-cellulose by a novel simple one-pot cryosynthesis. They allow surgical sterility by means of autoclaving, and present native laminin as an attachment motive for neural adhesion and neurite development. They are designed to protect an extended, living neuronal network during compression to a small fraction of the original volume in order to enable minimally invasive delivery. The scaffolds behave as a mechanical meta-material: they are soft at the macroscopic scale, enabling injection through narrow-bore tubing and potentially good cellular scaffold integration in soft target tissues such as the brain. At the same time, the scaffold material has a high local Young modulus, allowing protection of the neuronal network during injection. Based on macroscopic and nanomechanical characterization, the generic geometrical and mechanical design rules are presented, enabling macroporous cellular scaffold injectability.
Lab on a Chip | 2009
Raphaël Tornay; Thomas Braschler; Philippe Renaud
We present here a microfluidic device for the chemical modification of particles. In order to alleviate diffusive mixing issues beads are pushed from a starting buffer to a reagent over a wide channel by an array of shifted electrodes. We also show that the effect of reagent diffusion can be compensated by electrophoretic forces.
Lab on a Chip | 2010
Thomas Braschler; Ana Valero; Ludovica Colella; Kristopher Pataky; Juergen Brugger; Philippe Renaud
Controlling alginate gel formation by diffusion of Ca(2+) ions through a filter barrier, a layer-by-layer deposition technique with resolution on the size scale of a single cell is presented. It offers the possibility of exposing cells under biocompatible conditions to microheterogeneous three-dimensional environments, mimicking the layered structure of extracellular matrix in tissues.
Biomedical Physics & Engineering Express | 2017
Meltem Elitas; Neeraj Dhar; Katrin Schneider; Ana Valero; Thomas Braschler; John D. McKinney; Philippe Renaud
Real-time, quantitative characterization of cells at single-cell resolution, particularly while maintain- ing their intrinsic properties and without affecting cellular processes, is of primary importance in modern biological assays. Dielectrophoresis is a label-free, real-time, and quantitative technique, and is amenable to integration with other techniques, thus providing new and powerful tools for biology and medicine. In this study we present dielectrophoresis as a characterization tool for Mycobacterium smegmatis single cells. Understanding how phenotypically variant M. smegmatis cells respond dielectrophoretically when subject to the same electric field, could reveal underlying membrane altering mechanisms related to cell death, drug-tolerance, and drug-resistance. In this study, we dielectrophoretically characterized live, heat-treated and antibiotic-treated bacteria. Our results present quantifications of cellular behaviors associated with membrane-specific cell damages and demonstrate adequacy of dielectrophoretic devices in point-of-care diagnostic and monitoring for bacterial infections.
Lab on a Chip | 2007
Thomas Braschler; Joël Theytaz; Ronit Zvitov-Marabi; Harald van Lintel; Grazia Loche; Anja Kunze; Nicolas Demierre; Raphaël Tornay; Mario Schlund; Philippe Renaud
We present a channel geometry that allows for clean switching between different inlets of a microchip without any contamination of the inlets or the downstream flow. We drive this virtual valve with a pneumatic pressure setup that minimizes disturbance of the downstream flow during the switching procedure by simultaneous variation of the pressures applied to the different inlets. We assess the efficiency of the setup by spectroscopic measurement of downstream dye concentrations, and demonstrate its practical utility by sequentially constructing multiple layers of alginate hydrogel. The method is potentially useful for a whole series of further applications, such as changing perfusion liquids for cell culture and cell analysis, metering, chemical-reaction initiation and multi-sample chromatography, to name a few.