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Microfluidic device captures blood vessel splitting in action

Researcher captures blood vessel splitting in action
Endothelial cell bridges with diverse morphologies transect the lumen of microphysiologic vessel conduit. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2423700122

For months, Sabrina Staples stared at a silicone chip no bigger than a postage stamp, trying to coax cells into doing something remarkable. But every time she loaded her delicate microfluidic device with cells, a single rogue bubble would sneak in, destroying the cells and the experiment.

"Often before falling asleep, I would visualize being in the channel, looking around for the source of these bubbles," she said. "I knew if I could figure this out, we could finally get the model to work and see something no one had seen before."

Her determination paid off. With the bubbles gone, a long-overlooked biological process came into focus.

Staples, a Ph.D. candidate in medical biophysics, is now first author on a published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that breaks new ground in our understanding of how blood vessels grow by splitting in two.

The process, called intussusceptive angiogenesis (IA), is a lesser-known form of blood vessel growth—complementary to the classic "sprouting" angiogenesis many of us learn about in biology class. Instead of growing new vessels like branches from a tree, IA splits an existing vessel. It's faster, more efficient, and surprisingly understudied.

"As a scientific community, we've focused our efforts on sprouting," said Staples. "But we highlighted that IA is more common than its limited study suggests, occurring in wounds, cancerous tumors, and even excessively in the lungs of patients who died from COVID-19."

That's partly because IA is challenging to study and observe in living organisms. So Staples and her colleagues in Dr. Geoffrey Pickering's lab engineered a "vessel-on-a-chip," a transparent, microchannel lined with and perfused with cell culture media to mimic real blood vessels. The trick was building the channel flush to a glass coverslip—close enough to capture the fine cellular movements with high-resolution microscopy.

What they saw astonished them: cells aligning distinctly from their neighbors, then snapping into bridges across the vessel's lumen—a prelude to splitting. This bridging behavior had been captured at single timepoints, but never fully caught in action.

The findings offer new insight into how reorganize and suggest that IA could be a powerful target for therapies aimed at promoting or halting vessel growth. Staples hopes her discoveries will spur further research into the regulation of IA and help reframe how scientists can approach sophisticated human in vitro models—tools that allow researchers to study biological processes outside the body.

Researcher captures blood vessel splitting in action
Credit: University of Western Ontario

"Now that we can model this process on a chip, we can more reliably ask the next set of questions and with greater control," she said.

Having just defended her Ph.D. thesis, Staples is pursuing a career in the pharmaceutical and , hoping to push targeting vascular disease and stroke.

"I'm a vascular biologist at heart," she said. "Blood vessels are an important part of almost every tissue—skin, , brain—so when they don't work, nothing else really does."

More information: Sabrina C. R. Staples et al, Intussusceptive angiogenesis-on-a-chip: Evidence for transluminal vascular bridging by endothelial delamination, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025).

Citation: Microfluidic device captures blood vessel splitting in action (2025, August 12) retrieved 12 August 2025 from /news/2025-08-microfluidic-device-captures-blood-vessel.html
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