Publication | Closed Access
Rapid dielectrophoretic characterization of single cells using the dielectrophoretic spring
57
Citations
23
References
2013
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyAnalytical MicrosystemsSingle CellsOrgan-on-a-chipBiomedical EngineeringElectrical PropertiesBioanalysisSingle MoleculeMicrofluidicsBiofluid DynamicBiophysicsContinuous-flow Microfluidic DeviceBiomedical AnalysisCell EngineeringCell BiologyCellular BioengineeringSingle-molecule DetectionFluid DragBiomedical DiagnosticsBioelectronicsLab-on-a-chipBiomemsMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Dielectrophoresis-based cell separation has significant promise for separation of cells from heterogeneous mixtures based on their electrical properties and is used in diverse areas ranging from hematopoietic stem cell purification to cancer cell isolation. The electrical properties of cells in heterogeneous populations determine if and how well cell subpopulations are separable, and therefore the utility of dielectrophoretic separation is fundamentally determined by our ability to measure electrical properties of cell populations on a cell-by-cell basis. We developed an automated system for electrical characterization of cells that can characterize 1000's of individual cells across a range of conditions (>30 conditions/h). The system uses a continuous-flow microfluidic device and a method termed the dielectrophoretic spring that uses the force balance between dielectrophoresis and fluid drag to measure electrical properties of cells independent of size. We present characterization of the method with beads and cells as well as its application to rapidly find conditions that can discriminate neutrophils with different activation states.
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