Author
Listed:
- Nicholas L. Calistri
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- Robert J. Kimmerling
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- Seth W. Malinowski
(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
- Mehdi Touat
(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
- Mark M. Stevens
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
- Selim Olcum
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- Keith L. Ligon
(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Harvard Medical School
Boston Children’s Hospital
Brigham and Women’s Hospital)
- Scott R. Manalis
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Abstract
A fundamental trade-off between flow rate and measurement precision limits performance of many single-cell detection strategies, especially for applications that require biophysical measurements from living cells within complex and low-input samples. To address this, we introduce ‘active loading’, an automated, optically-triggered fluidic system that improves measurement throughput and robustness by controlling entry of individual cells into a measurement channel. We apply active loading to samples over a range of concentrations (1–1000 particles μL−1), demonstrate that measurement time can be decreased by up to 20-fold, and show theoretically that performance of some types of existing single-cell microfluidic devices can be improved by implementing active loading. Finally, we demonstrate how active loading improves clinical feasibility for acute, single-cell drug sensitivity measurements by deploying it to a preclinical setting where we assess patient samples from normal brain, primary and metastatic brain cancers containing a complex, difficult-to-measure mixture of confounding biological debris.
Suggested Citation
Nicholas L. Calistri & Robert J. Kimmerling & Seth W. Malinowski & Mehdi Touat & Mark M. Stevens & Selim Olcum & Keith L. Ligon & Scott R. Manalis, 2018.
"Microfluidic active loading of single cells enables analysis of complex clinical specimens,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-7, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-018-07283-x
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07283-x
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