The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Austin, TX 78712-0238, USA.
Lab Chip. 2011 Oct 21;11(20):3449-57. doi: 10.1039/c1lc20270g. Epub 2011 Aug 24.
Screening for circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in blood has been an object of interest for evidence of progressive disease, status of disease activity, recognition of clonal evolution of molecular changes and for possible early diagnosis of cancer. We describe a new method of microchip-based immunomagnetic CTC detection, in which the benefits of both immunomagnetic assay and the microfluidic device are combined. As the blood sample flows through the microchannel closely above arrayed magnets, cancer cells labeled with magnetic nanoparticles are separated from blood flow and deposited at the bottom wall of the glass coverslip, which allows direct observation of captured cells with a fluorescence microscope. A polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based microchannel fixed on a glass coverslip was used to screen blood samples. The thin, flat dimensions of the microchannel, combined with the sharp magnetic field gradient in the vicinity of arrayed magnets with alternate polarities, lead to an effective capture of labeled cells. Compared to the commercially available CellSearch™ system, fewer (25%) magnetic particles are required to achieve a comparable capture rate, while the screening speed (at an optimal blood flow rate of 10 mL h(-1)) is more than five times faster than those reported previously with a microchannel-based assay. For the screening experiment, blood drawn from healthy subjects into CellSave™ tubes was spiked with cultured cancer cell lines of COLO205 and SKBR3. The blood was then kept at room temperature for 48 hours before the screening, emulating the actual clinical cases of blood screening. Customized Fe(3)O(4) magnetic nanoparticles (Veridex Ferrofluid™) conjugated to anti-epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) antibodies were introduced into the blood samples to label cancer cells, and the blood was then run through the microchip device to capture the labelled cells. After capture, the cells were stained with fluorescent labelled anti-cytokeratin, DAPI and anti-CD45. Subsequent immunofluorescence images were taken for the captured cells, followed by comprehensive computer aided analysis based on fluorescence intensities and cell morphology. Rare cancer cells (from ∼1000 cells down to ∼5 cells per mL) with very low tumor cell to blood cell ratios (about 1 : 10(7) to 10(9), including red blood cells) were successfully detected. Cancer cell capture rates of 90% and 86% were demonstrated for COLO205 and SKBR3 cells, respectively.
循环肿瘤细胞 (CTC) 的检测一直是研究进展性疾病、疾病活动状态、识别分子变化的克隆进化以及早期癌症诊断的目标。我们描述了一种新的基于微芯片的免疫磁 CTC 检测方法,该方法结合了免疫磁检测和微流控装置的优势。当血液样本流过微通道时,紧密地位于排列的磁体上方,用磁性纳米颗粒标记的癌细胞从血流中分离出来,并沉积在玻璃盖玻片的底部壁上,这允许用荧光显微镜直接观察捕获的细胞。使用基于聚二甲基硅氧烷 (PDMS) 的微通道固定在玻璃盖玻片上,以筛选血液样本。微通道的薄而扁平的尺寸,加上排列的磁铁附近交替极性的强磁场梯度,导致标记细胞的有效捕获。与市售的 CellSearch™系统相比,只需要 25%的磁性颗粒就可以达到相当的捕获率,而筛选速度(在最佳血流速度为 10 mL h(-1))是以前基于微通道检测的五倍以上。对于筛选实验,从健康受试者采集的血液样本保存在 CellSave™管中,然后用培养的 COLO205 和 SKBR3 癌细胞系进行刺激。然后在筛选前将血液在室温下保存 48 小时,模拟实际的血液筛选临床病例。将定制的 Fe(3)O(4)磁性纳米颗粒(Veridex Ferrofluid™)与抗上皮细胞黏附分子(EpCAM)抗体偶联,引入血液样本中标记癌细胞,然后将血液样本通过微芯片装置捕获标记的细胞。捕获后,用荧光标记的抗细胞角蛋白、DAPI 和抗 CD45 对细胞进行染色。对捕获的细胞进行免疫荧光图像拍摄,然后基于荧光强度和细胞形态进行综合计算机辅助分析。成功检测到罕见的癌细胞(从约 1000 个细胞到约 5 个细胞/mL),其肿瘤细胞与血细胞的比例非常低(约 1:10(7)到 10(9),包括红细胞)。对 COLO205 和 SKBR3 细胞的癌细胞捕获率分别为 90%和 86%。