AUTHOR=Aich Anupam , Lamarre Yann , Sacomani Daniel Pereira , Kashima Simone , Covas Dimas Tadeu , de la Torre Lucimara Gaziola TITLE=Microfluidics in Sickle Cell Disease Research: State of the Art and a Perspective Beyond the Flow Problem JOURNAL=Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences VOLUME=7 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/molecular-biosciences/articles/10.3389/fmolb.2020.558982 DOI=10.3389/fmolb.2020.558982 ISSN=2296-889X ABSTRACT=
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the monogenic hemoglobinopathy where mutated sickle hemoglobin molecules polymerize to form long fibers under deoxygenated state and deform red blood cells (RBCs) into predominantly sickle form. Sickled RBCs stick to the vascular bed and obstruct blood flow in extreme conditions, leading to acute painful vaso-occlusion crises (VOCs) – the leading cause of mortality in SCD. Being a blood disorder of deformed RBCs, SCD manifests a wide-range of organ-specific clinical complications of life (in addition to chronic pain) such as stroke, acute chest syndrome (ACS) and pulmonary hypertension in the lung, nephropathy, auto-splenectomy, and splenomegaly, hand-foot syndrome, leg ulcer, stress erythropoiesis, osteonecrosis and osteoporosis. The physiological inception for VOC was initially thought to be only a fluid flow problem in microvascular space originated from increased viscosity due to aggregates of sickled RBCs; however, over the last three decades, multiple molecular and cellular mechanisms have been identified that aid the VOC