Link A, Franke T
Division of Biomedical Engineering, School of Engineering, University of Glasgow, Oakfield Avenue, G12 8LT, Glasgow, UK.
Lab Chip. 2020 Jun 7;20(11):1991-1998. doi: 10.1039/c9lc00999j. Epub 2020 May 5.
We demonstrate an acoustic device to mechanically probe a population of red blood cells at the single cell level. The device operates by exciting a surface acoustic wave in a microfluidic channel creating a stationary acoustic wave field of nodes and antinodes. Erythrocytes are attracted to the nodes and are deformed. Using a stepwise increasing and periodically oscillating acoustic field we study the static and dynamic deformation of individual red blood cells one by one. We quantify the deformation by the Taylor deformation index D and relaxation times τ and τ that reveal both the viscous and elastic properties of the cells. The precision of the measurement allows us to distinguish between individual cells in the suspension and provides a quantitative viscoelastic fingerprint of the blood sample at single cell resolution. The method overcomes limitations of other techniques that provide averaged values and has the potential for high-throughput.
我们展示了一种声学装置,可在单细胞水平上对红细胞群体进行机械探测。该装置通过在微流体通道中激发表面声波来操作,从而产生由节点和波腹组成的驻波声场。红细胞被吸引到节点处并发生变形。通过使用逐步增加且周期性振荡的声场,我们逐一研究单个红细胞的静态和动态变形。我们通过泰勒变形指数D以及弛豫时间τ和τ来量化变形,这些参数揭示了细胞的粘性和弹性特性。测量的精度使我们能够区分悬浮液中的单个细胞,并以单细胞分辨率提供血样的定量粘弹性指纹。该方法克服了其他提供平均值的技术的局限性,具有高通量的潜力。