2 research outputs found

    Integrated microfluidic biosensing platform for simultaneous confocal microscopy and electrophysiological measurements on bilayer lipid membranes and ion channels

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    Combining high-resolution imaging and electrophysiological recordings is key for various types of experimentation on lipid bilayers and ion channels. Here, we propose an integrated biosensing platform consisting of a microfluidic cartridge and a dedicated chip-holder to conduct such dual measurements on suspended lipid bilayers, in a user-friendly manner. To illustrate the potential of the integrated platform, we characterize lipid bilayers in terms of thickness and fluidity while simultaneously monitoring single ion channel currents. For that purpose, POPC lipid bilayers are supplemented with a fluorescently-tagged phospholipid (NBD-PE, 1% mol) for Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP) measurements and a model ion channel (gramicidin, 1 nM). These combined measurements reveal that NBD-PE has no effect on the lipid bilayer thickness while gramicidin induces thinning of the membrane. Furthermore, the presence of gramicidin does not alter the lipid bilayer fluidity. Surprisingly, in lipid bilayers supplemented with both probes, a reduction in gramicidin open probability and lifetime is observed compared to lipid bilayers with gramicidin only, suggesting an influence of NBD-PE on the gramicidin ion function. Altogether, our proposed microfluidic biosensing platform in combination with the herein presented multi-parametric measurement scheme paves the way to explore the interdependent relationship between lipid bilayer properties and ion channel function

    Building an Agenda for Socio-Technical Integration Approaches

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    Collaborative approaches for supporting the consideration of societal and ethical implications and contexts in the ongoing work of research and innovation actors have proliferated throughout the Science and Technologies Studies community over the last 10 years. These developments present an opportunity to develop a common agenda of research. This chapter reports on two recent exercises that brought together socio-technical integration scholars and practitioners in order to scope out and reflect upon what such an agenda might entail. After summarising a handful of recurrent methodological, conceptual and normative themes that were articulated in both exercises, it briefly situates these within the literature and identifies some ‘next steps’ for continued agenda-building
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