Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Oct 16;8(10):e75901. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0075901. eCollection 2013.
Abnormal cell mechanical stiffness can point to the development of various diseases including cancers and infections. We report a new microfluidic technique for continuous cell separation utilizing variation in cell stiffness. We use a microfluidic channel decorated by periodic diagonal ridges that compress the flowing cells in rapid succession. The compression in combination with secondary flows in the ridged microfluidic channel translates each cell perpendicular to the channel axis in proportion to its stiffness. We demonstrate the physical principle of the cell sorting mechanism and show that our microfluidic approach can be effectively used to separate a variety of cell types which are similar in size but of different stiffnesses, spanning a range from 210 Pa to 23 kPa. Atomic force microscopy is used to directly measure the stiffness of the separated cells and we found that the trajectories in the microchannel correlated to stiffness. We have demonstrated that the current processing throughput is 250 cells per second. This microfluidic separation technique opens new ways for conducting rapid and low-cost cell analysis and disease diagnostics through biophysical markers.
异常的细胞机械硬度可能指向各种疾病的发展,包括癌症和感染。我们报告了一种新的微流控技术,用于利用细胞硬度的变化进行连续的细胞分离。我们使用周期性对角脊修饰的微流道来快速连续地压缩流动的细胞。这种压缩与脊状微流道中的二次流相结合,将每个细胞按照其硬度成比例地垂直于通道轴进行传递。我们展示了细胞分选机制的物理原理,并表明我们的微流控方法可以有效地用于分离各种细胞类型,这些细胞在尺寸上相似,但硬度不同,范围从 210 Pa 到 23 kPa。原子力显微镜用于直接测量分离细胞的硬度,我们发现微通道中的轨迹与硬度相关。我们已经证明当前的处理吞吐量为每秒 250 个细胞。这种微流控分离技术为通过生物物理标记进行快速和低成本的细胞分析和疾病诊断开辟了新的途径。