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A wound healing assay is a laboratory technique used to study cell migration and cell–cell interaction. This is also called a scratch assay because it is done by making a scratch on a cell monolayer and capturing images at regular intervals by time lapse microscope.
It is specifically a 2D cell migration approach to semi-quantitatively measure cell migration of a sheet of cells. This scratch can be made through various approaches, such as mechanical, thermal, or chemical damage. The purpose of this scratch is to produce a cell-free area in hopes of inducing cells to migrate and close the gap. The scratch test is only ideal for cell types that migrate as a collective epithelial sheets and not useful for non-adherent cells. Specifically, this assay isn't ideal for chemotaxis studies.