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1.
Atherosclerotic lesions occur non-randomly at vascular niches in bends and bifurcations where fluid flow can be characterized as "disturbed" (low shear stress with both forward and retrograde flow). Endothelial cells (ECs) at these locations experience significantly lower average shear stress without change in the levels of pressure or strain, which affects the local balance in mechanical stresses. Common in vitro models of atherosclerosis focus primarily on shear stress without accounting for pressure and strain loading. To overcome this limitation, we used our microfluidic endothelial cell culture model (ECCM) to achieve accurate replication of pressure, strain, and shear stress waveforms associated with both normal flow seen in straight sections of arteries and disturbed flow seen in the abdominal aorta in the infrarenal segment at the wall distal to the inferior mesenteric artery (IMA), which is associated with high incidence of atherosclerotic lesion formation. Human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs) were cultured within the ECCM under both normal and disturbed flow and evaluated for cell shape, cytoskeletal alignment, endothelial barrier function, and inflammation using immunofluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. Results clearly demonstrate quantifiable differences between cells cultured under disturbed flow conditions, which are cuboidal with short and randomly oriented actin microfilaments and show intermittent expression of β-Catenin and cells cultured under normal flow. However, in the absence of pro-inflammatory stimulation, the levels of expression of activation markers: intra cellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1), platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1), and vascular endothelial cell growth factor - receptor 2 (VEGF-R2) known to be involved in the initiation of plaque formation were only slightly higher in HAECs cultured under disturbed flow in comparison to cells cultured under normal flow.  相似文献   

2.
Seamless integration of biological components with electrochemical sensors is critical in the development of microdevices for cell analysis. The present paper describes the integration miniature Au electrodes next to immune cells (macrophages) in order to detect cell-secreted hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)). Photopatterning of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels was used to both immobilize horseradish peroxidase molecules onto electrodes and to define regions for cell attachment in the vicinity of sensing electrodes. Electrodes micropatterned in such a manner were enclosed inside poly(dimethylsiloxane) fluid conduits and incubated with macrophages. The cells attached onto the exposed glass regions in the vicinity of the electrodes and nowhere else on the non-fouling PEG hydrogel surface. A microfluidic device was converted into an electrochemical cell by placing flow-through Ag∕AgCl reference and Pt wire counter electrodes at the outlet and inlet, respectively. This microdevice with integrated H(2)O(2)-sensing electrodes had sensitivity of 27 μA∕cm(2) mM with a limit of detection of 2 μM. Importantly, this microdevice allowed controllable seeding of macrophages next to electrodes, activation of these cells and on-chip monitoring of H(2)O(2) release in real time. In the future, this biosensor platform may be utilized for monitoring of macrophage responses to pathogens or for the study of inflammatory signaling in micropatterned cell cultures.  相似文献   

3.
In sexual assault cases, forensic samples are a mixture of sperm from the perpetrator and epithelial cells from the victim. To obtain an independent short tandem repeat (STR) profile of the perpetrator, sperm cells must be separated from the mixture of cells. However, the current method used in crime laboratories, namely, differential extraction, is a time-consuming and labor-intensive process. To achieve a rapid and automated sample pretreatment process, we fabricated a microdevice for hydrodynamic and size-based separation of sperm and epithelial cells. When cells in suspension were introduced into the device''s microfluidic channels, they were forced to flow along different streamlines and into different outlets due to their different diameters. With the proposed microdevice, sperm can be separated within a short period of time (0.5 h for a 50-μl mock sample). The STR profiles of the products in the sperm outlet reservoir demonstrated that a highly purified male DNA fraction could be obtained (94.0% male fraction). This microdevice is of low-cost and can be easily integrated with other subsequent analysis units, providing great potential in the process of analyzing sexual assault evidence as well as in other areas requiring cell sorting.  相似文献   

4.
Flow cytometry is a standard analytical method in cell biology and clinical diagnostics and is widely distributed for the experimental investigation of microparticle characteristics. In this work, the design, realization, and measurement results of a novel planar optofluidic flow cytometric device with an integrated three-dimensional (3D) adjustable optofluidic lens system for forward-scattering∕extinction-based biochemical analysis fabricated by silicon micromachining are presented. To our knowledge, this is the first planar cytometric system with the ability to focus light three-dimensionally on cells∕particles by the application of fluidic lenses. The single layer microfluidic platform enables versatile 3D hydrodynamic sample focusing to an arbitrary position in the channel and incorporates integrated fiber grooves for the insertion of glass fibers. To confirm the fluid dynamics and raytracing simulations and to characterize the sensor, different cell lines and sets of microparticles were investigated by detecting the extinction (axial light loss) signal, demonstrating the high sensitivity and sample discrimination capability of this analysis system. The unique features of this planar microdevice enable new biotechnological analysis techniques due to the highly increased sensitivity.  相似文献   

5.
Microfluidic devices have emerged as important tools for experimental physiology. They allow to study the effects of hydrodynamic flow on physiological and pathophysiological processes, e.g., in the circulatory system of the body. Such dynamic in vitro test systems are essential in order to address fundamental problems in drug delivery and targeted imaging, such as the binding of particles to cells under flow. In the present work an acoustically driven microfluidic platform is presented in which four miniature flow channels can be operated in parallel at distinct flow velocities with only slight inter-experimental variations. The device can accommodate various channel architectures and is fully compatible with cell culture as well as microscopy. Moreover, the flow channels can be readily separated from the surface acoustic wave pumps and subsequently channel-associated luminescence, absorbance, and/or fluorescence can be determined with a standard microplate reader. In order to create artificial blood vessels, different coatings were evaluated for the cultivation of endothelial cells in the microchannels. It was found that 0.01% fibronectin is the most suitable coating for growth of endothelial monolayers. Finally, the microfluidic system was used to study the binding of 1 μm polystyrene microspheres to three different types of endothelial cell monolayers (HUVEC, HUVECtert, HMEC-1) at different average shear rates. It demonstrated that average shear rates between 0.5 s−1 and 2.25 s−1 exert no significant effect on cytoadhesion of particles to all three types of endothelial monolayers. In conclusion, the multichannel microfluidic platform is a promising device to study the impact of hydrodynamic forces on cell physiology and binding of drug carriers to endothelium.  相似文献   

6.
Microfluidic devices allow for the production of physiologically relevant cellular microenvironments by including biomimetic hydrogels and generating controlled chemical gradients. During transport, the biomolecules interact in distinct ways with the fibrillar networks: as purely diffusive factors in the soluble fluid or bound to the matrix proteins. These two main mechanisms may regulate distinct cell responses in order to guide their directional migration: caused by the substrate-bound chemoattractant gradient (haptotaxis) or by the gradient established within the soluble fluid (chemotaxis). In this work 3D diffusion experiments, in combination with ELISA assays, are performed using microfluidic platforms in order to quantify the distribution of PDGF-BB and TGF-β1 across collagen and fibrin gels. Furthermore, to gain a deeper understanding of the fundamental processes, the experiments are reproduced by computer simulations based on a reaction-diffusion transport model. This model yields an accurate prediction of the experimental results, confirming that diffusion and binding phenomena are established within the microdevice.  相似文献   

7.
This paper describes a pneumatic valve controlled microdevice for performing mixing and reaction. This microdevice combined the degassed polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) pumping method with a syringe-actuated valve system to control the dispensing and mixing of nanoliter solutions. The syringe was used to manually generate vacuum and to open the valves. Upon the opening of the valve, the microchamber was filled with the solution, which was driven by the external atmosphere through the degassed PDMS microchannel. With this microdevice, the enzymatic kinetics of alkaline phosphatase converting the fluorescein diphosphate was studied, and the Michaelis-Menten kinetics was analyzed. The microdevice has the advantages of simplicity and low cost in fabrication and operation.  相似文献   

8.
A barrier in scaling laboratory processes into automated microfluidic devices has been the transfer of laboratory based assays: Where engineering meets biological protocol. One basic requirement is to reliably and accurately know the distribution and number of biological cells being dispensed. In this study, a novel optical counting technique to efficiently quantify the number of cells flowing into a microtube is presented. REH, B-lymphoid precursor leukemia, are stained with a fluorescent dye and frames of moving cells are recorded using a charge coupled device (CCD) camera. The basic principle is to calculate the total fluorescence intensity of the image and to divide it by the average intensity of a single cell. This method allows counting the number of cells with an uncertainty ±5%, which compares favorably to the standard biological methodology, based on the manual Trypan Blue assay, which is destructive to the cells and presents an uncertainty in the order of 20%. The use of a microdevice for vertical hydrodynamic focusing, which can reduce the background noise of out of focus cells by concentrating the cells in a thin layer, has further improved the technique. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation and confocal laser scanning microscopy images have shown an 82% reduction in the vertical displacement of the cells. For the flow rates imposed during this study, a throughput of 100–200 cells∕s is achieved.  相似文献   

9.
Epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) confers migratory and invasiveness abilities on cancer cells, as well as leading to changes in biomechanical properties and cytoskeletal structure. Cell mechanical properties are considered to be promising label-free markers for diagnosis of cancer metastasis. In this work, cell compressibility, a novel and important parameter of cell mechanical properties, was measured directly and quickly using a specially designed acoustofluidic microdevice. The compressibilities of cells with different metastatic potentials were investigated. Based on a comparison of the measurement results, non-metastatic cells exhibited lower compressibility than metastatic cells. The correlation between cell compressibility and EMT status was further studied; the results showed that the acquisition of mesenchymal status was accompanied by an increase in cell compressibility. These findings imply strong correlations among cell compressibility, EMT status, and invasiveness. Therefore, cell compressibility represents a novel biomechanical marker for evaluating malignant transformation and metastasis of cancer.  相似文献   

10.
A flow redirection and single cell immobilization method in a microfluidic chip is presented. Microheaters generated localized heating and induced poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) phase transition, creating a hydrogel that blocked a channel or immobilized a single cell. The heaters were activated in sets to redirect flow and exchange the fluid in which an immobilized cell was immersed. A yeast cell was immobilized in hydrogel and a 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) fluorescent stain was introduced using flow redirection. DAPI diffused through the hydrogel and fluorescently labelled the yeast DNA, demonstrating in situ single cell biochemistry by means of immobilization and fluid exchange.The ability to control microfluidic flow is central to nearly all lab-on-a-chip processes. Recent developments in microfluidics either include microchannel based flow control in which microvalves are used to control the passage of fluid,1 or are based on discrete droplet translocation in which electric fields or thermal gradients are used to determine the droplet path.2, 3 Reconfigurable microfluidic systems have certain advantages, including the ability to adapt downstream fluid processes such as sorting to upstream conditions and events. This is especially relevant for work with individual biomolecules and high throughput cell sorting.4 Additionally, reconfigurable microfluidic systems allow for rerouting flows around defective areas for high device yield or lifetime and for increasing the device versatility as a single chip design can have a variety of applications.Microvalves often form the basis of flow control systems and use magnetic, electric, piezoelectric, and pneumatic actuation methods.5 Many of these designs require complicated fabrication steps and can have large complex structures that limit the scalability or feasability of complex microfluidic systems. Recent work has shown how phase transition of stimuli-responsive hydrogels can be used to actuate a simple valve design.6 Beebe et al. demonstrated pH actuated hydrogel valves.7 Phase transition of thermosensitive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) using a heater element was demonstrated by Richter et al.8 Phase transition was also achieved by using light actuation by Chen et al.9 Electric heating has shown a microflow response time of less than 33 ms.11 Previous work10 showed the use of microheaters to induce a significant shift in the viscosity of thermosensitive hydrogel to block microchannel flow and deflect a membrane, stopping flow in another microchannel. Additionally, Yu et al.12 demonstrated thermally actuated valves based on porous polymer monoliths with PNIPAAm. Krishnan and Erickson13 showed how reconfigurable optically actuated hydrogel formation can be used to dynamically create highly viscous areas and thus redirect flow with a response time of  ~ 2?s. This process can be used to embed individual biomolecules in hydrogel and suppress diffusion as also demonstrated by others.15, 16 Fiddes et al.14 demonstrated the use of hydrogels to transport immobilized biomolecules in a digital microfluidic system. While the design of Krishnan and Erickson is highly flexible, it requires the use of an optical system and absorption layer to generate a geometric pattern to redirect flow.This paper describes the use of an array of gold microheaters positioned in a single layer polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microfluidic network to dynamically control microchannel flow of PNIPAAm solution. Heat generation and thus PNIPAAm phase transition were localized as the microheaters were actuated using pulse width modulation (PWM) of an applied electric potential. Additionally, hydrogel was used to embed and immobilise individual cells, exchange the fluid parts of the microfluidic system in order to expose the cells to particular reagents to carry out an in situ biochemical process. The PDMS microchannel network and the microheater array are shown in Figure Figure11.Open in a separate windowFigure 1A sketch of the electrical circuit and a microscope image of the gold microheaters and the PDMS microchannels. The power to the heaters was modulated with a PWM input through a H-bridge. For clarity, the electrical circuit for only the two heaters with gelled PNIPAAm is shown (H1 and V2). There are four heaters (V1-V4) in the “vertical channels” and three heaters (H1-H3) in the “horizontal” channel.The microchannels were fabricated using a patterned mould on a silicon wafer to define PDMS microchannels, as described by DeBusschere et al.17 and based on previous work.10 A 25 × 75 mm glass microscope slide served as the remaining wall of the microchannel system as well as the substrate for the microheater array. The gold layer had a thickness of 200 nm and was deposited and patterned using E-beam evaporation and photoresist lift-off.21 The gold was patterned to function as connecting electrical conductors as well as the microheaters.It was crucial that the microheater array was aligned with an accuracy of  ~ 20μm with the PDMS microchannel network for good heat localization. The PDMS and glass lid were treated with plasma to activate the surface and alignment was carried out by mounting the microscope slide onto the condenser lens of an inverted microscope (TE-2000 Nikon Instruments). While imaging with a 4× objective, the x, y motorized stage aligned the microchannels to the heaters and the condenser lens was lowered for the glass substrate to contact the PDMS and seal the microchannels.Local phase transition of 10% w/w PNIPAAm solution in the microchannels was achieved by applying a 7 V potential through a H-bridge that received a PWM input at 500 Hz which was modulated using a USB controller (Arduino Mega 2650) and a matlab (Mathworks) GUI. The duty cycle of the PWM input was calibrated for each microheater to account for differences in heater resistances (25?Ω to 52?Ω) due to varying lengths of on-chip connections and slight fabrication inconsistencies, as well as for different flow conditions during device operation. Additionally, thermal cross-talk between heaters required decreasing the PWM input significantly when multiple heaters were activated simultaneously. This allowed confining the areas of cross-linked PNIPAAm to the microheaters, allowing the fluid in other areas to flow freely.By activating the heaters in sets, it was possible to redirect the flow and exchange the fluid in the central area. Figure Figure22 demonstrates how the flow direction in the central microchannel area was changed from a stable horizontal flow to a stable vertical flow with a 3 s response time, using only PNIPAAm phase transition. Constant pressures were applied to the inlets to the horizontal channel and to the vertical channels. Activating heaters V1-4 (Figure (Figure2,2, left) resulted in flow in the horizontal channel only. Likewise, activating heaters H1 and H2 allowed for flow in the vertical channel only. In this sequence, the fluid in the central microchannel area from one inlet was exchanged with fluid from the other inlet. Additionally, by activating heater H3, a particle could be immobilised during the exchange of fluid as shown in Figure Figure33 (top).Open in a separate windowFigure 2Switching between fluid from the horizontal and the vertical channel using hydrogel activation and flow redirection with a response time of 3 s. A pressure of 25 mbar was applied to the inlet of the horizontal channel and a pressure of 20 mbar to the vertical channel. The flow field was determined using particle image velocimetry, in which the displacement of fluorescent seed particles was determined from image pairs generated by laser pulse exposure. Processing was carried out with davis software (LaVision).Open in a separate windowFigure 3A series of microscope images near heater H3 showing: (1a)-(1c) A single yeast cell captured by local PNIPAAm phase transition and immobilized for 5 min before being released. (2a) A single yeast cell was identified for capture by embedding in hydrogel. (2b) The cell as well as the hydrogel displayed fluorescence while embedded due to the introduction of DAPI in the surrounding region. (2c) The diffusion of DAPI towards the cell as the heating power of H3 is reduced after 15 min, showing a DAPI stained yeast cell immobilized.Particle immobilisation in hydrogel and fluid exchange in the central area of the microfluidic network were used to carry out an in situ biochemical process in which a yeast cell injected through one inlet was stained in situ with a 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) solution (Invitrogen), which attached to the DNA of the yeast cell.18 A solution of yeast cells with a concentration of 5 × 107cells/ml suspended in a 10% w/w PNIPAAm solution was injected through the horizontal channel. A solution of 2μg/l DAPI in a 10% w/w PNIPAAm solution was injected through the vertical channel. A single yeast cell was identified and captured near the central heater, and by deactivating the heaters in the vertical channel, DAPI solution was introduced in the microchannels around the hydrogel. After immobilising the cell for 15 min, the heater was deactivated, releasing the cell in the DAPI solution. This process is shown in Figure Figure33 (bottom). The sequence of the heater activation and deactivation in order to immobilize the cell and exchange the fluid is outlined in the supplementary material.21Eriksen et al.15 demonstrated the diffusion of protease K in the porous hydrogel matrix,19 and it was therefore expected that DAPI fluorescent stain (molecular weight of 350 kDa, Ref. 20) would also diffuse. DAPI diffusion is shown in Figure 3(2b) in which the yeast cell shows fluorescence while embedded in the hydrogel. The yeast cell was released by deactivating the central heater and activating all the others to suppress unwanted flow in the microchannel. As a result, the single cell was fully immersed in the DAPI solution. Immobilization of a single cell allows for selection of a cell that exhibits a certain trait and introduction of a new fluid while maintaining the cell position in the field of view of the microscope such that a biochemical response can be imaged continuously.In summary, a microfluidic chip capable of local heating was used to induce phase transition of PNIPAAm to hydrogel, blocking microchannel flow, and thereby allowing for reconfigurable flow. Additionally, the hydrogel was used to embed and immobilise a single yeast cell. DAPI fluorescent stain was introduced using flow redirection, and it stained the immobilized cell, showing diffusion into the hydrogel. The versatile design of this microfluidic chip permits flow redirection, and is suitable to carry out in situ biochemical reactions on individual cells, demonstrating the potential of this technology for forming large-scale reconfigurable microfluidic networks for biochemical applications.  相似文献   

11.
Recent advances in microscale flow propulsion through bioinspired artificial cilia provide a promising alternative for lab-on-a-chip applications. However, the ability of actuating artificial cilia to achieve a time-dependent local flow control with high accuracy together with the elegance of full integration into the biocompatible microfluidic platforms remains remote. Driven by this motive, the current work has constructed a series of artificial cilia inside a microchannel to facilitate the time-dependent flow propulsion through artificial cilia actuation with high-speed (>40 Hz) circular beating behavior. The generated flow was quantified using micro-particle image velocimetry and particle tracking with instantaneous net flow velocity of up to 101 μm/s. Induced flow patterns caused by the tilted conical motion of artificial cilia constitutes efficient fluid propulsion at microscale. This flow phenomenon was further measured and illustrated by examining the induced flow behavior across the depth of the microchannel to provide a global view of the underlying flow propulsion mechanism. The presented analytic paradigms and substantial flow evidence present novel insights into the area of flow manipulation at microscale.  相似文献   

12.
伴随全球新兴制造网络的发展,企业间国际知识流动呈现出新特点,其影响因素研究也从关注二元属性要素向网络关系要素转化。为此,基于网络资源观,提出企业资源配置网络影响国际知识流动网络的概念模型,并选取3D打印产业进行实证分析。基于专利、商业等多源异构数据,采用新兴的二次指派程序方法(QAP),探讨产业发展各阶段影响要素及其演化。研究结果表明,国际化资源配置网络、价值链资源配置网络和产业制度资源配置网络均对国际知识流动网络有显著的正向影响;并且,其在产业不同发展阶段的作用效果有所不同。研究揭示了全球化、网络化时代企业间国际知识流动的新规律。  相似文献   

13.
The majority of cancer deaths are linked to tumor spread, or metastasis, but 3D in vitro metastasis models relevant to the tumor microenvironment (including interstitial fluid flow) remain an area of unmet need. Microfluidics allows us to introduce controlled flow to an in vitro cancer model to better understand the relationship between flow and metastasis. Here, we report new hybrid spheroid-on-chip in vitro models for the impact of interstitial fluid flow on cancer spread. We designed a series of reusable glass microfluidic devices to contain one spheroid in a microwell under continuous perfusion culture. Spheroids derived from established cancer cell lines were perfused with complete media at a flow rate relevant to tumor interstitial fluid flow. Spheroid viability and migratory/invasive capabilities were maintained on-chip when compared to off-chip static conditions. Importantly, using flow conditions modeled in vitro, we are the first to report flow-induced secretion of pro-metastatic factors, in this case cytokines vascular endothelial growth factor and interleukin 6. In summary, we have developed a new, streamlined spheroid-on-chip in vitro model that represents a feasible in vitro alternative to conventional murine in vivo metastasis assays, including complex tumor environmental factors, such as interstitial fluid flow, extracellular matrices, and using 3D models to model nutrient and oxygen gradients. Our device, therefore, constitutes a robust alternative to in vivo early-metastasis models for determination of novel metastasis biomarkers as well as evaluation of therapeutically relevant molecular targets not possible in in vivo murine models.  相似文献   

14.
[目的/意义]旨在科学分析人工智能数据安全影响因素促进新兴产业的快速发展。[方法/过程]首先利用数据科学的方法从国内外人工智能数据安全研究文献热点关键词中提取相关变量,随后用系统动力学方法构建因果关系图和系统流图,并为仿真模型编写方程、赋予参数,最后对模型的仿真效果进行灵敏度检验,以此探寻人工智能数据安全相关变量间的因果关系。[结果/结论]数据活动网络安全保护能力、智能算法准确性、数据滥用与泄露量是影响人工智能数据安全的三个重要因素。综合分析后提出人工智能数据安全性科学化发展建议。  相似文献   

15.
Studying the effects of pharmacological agents on human endothelium includes the routine use of cell monolayers cultivated in multi-well plates. This configuration fails to recapitulate the complex architecture of vascular networks in vivo and does not capture the relationship between shear stress (i.e. flow) experienced by the cells and dose of the applied pharmacological agents. Microfluidic platforms have been applied extensively to create vascular systems in vitro; however, they rely on bulky external hardware to operate, which hinders the wide application of microfluidic chips by non-microfluidic experts. Here, we have developed a standalone perfusion platform where multiple devices were perfused at a time with a single miniaturized peristaltic pump. Using the platform, multiple micro-vessel networks, that contained three levels of branching structures, were created by culturing endothelial cells within circular micro-channel networks mimicking the geometrical configuration of natural blood vessels. To demonstrate the feasibility of our platform for drug testing and validation assays, a drug induced nitric oxide assay was performed on the engineered micro-vessel network using a panel of vaso-active drugs (acetylcholine, phenylephrine, atorvastatin, and sildenafil), showing both flow and drug dose dependent responses. The interactive effects between flow and drug dose for sildenafil could not be captured by a simple straight rectangular channel coated with endothelial cells, but it was captured in a more physiological branching circular network. A monocyte adhesion assay was also demonstrated with and without stimulation by an inflammatory cytokine, tumor necrosis factor-α.  相似文献   

16.
The process of blood vessel formation is accompanied by very minimal flow in the beginning, followed by increased flow rates once the vessel develops sufficiently. Many studies have been performed for endothelial cells at shear stress levels of 0.1-60 dyn∕cm(2); however, little is known about the effect of extremely slow flows (shear stress levels of 10(-4)-10(-2) dyn∕cm(2)) that endothelial cells may experience during early blood vessel formation where flow-sensing by indirect mass transport sensing rather than through mechanoreceptor sensing mechanisms would become more important. Here, we show that extremely low flows enhance proliferation, adherens junction protein localization, and nitric oxide secretion of endothelial cells, but do not induce actin filament reorganization. The responses of endothelial cells in different flow microenvironments need more attention because increasing evidence shows that endothelial cell behaviors at the extremely slow flow regimes cannot be linearly extrapolated from observations at faster flow rates. The devices and methods described here provide a useful platform for such studies.  相似文献   

17.
Teh SY  Khnouf R  Fan H  Lee AP 《Biomicrofluidics》2011,5(4):44113-4411312
In this paper, we present a microfluidic platform for the continuous generation of stable, monodisperse lipid vesicles 20–110 μm in diameter. Our approach utilizes a microfluidic flow-focusing droplet generation design to control the vesicle size by altering the system’s fluid flow rates to generate vesicles with narrow size distribution. Double emulsions are first produced in consecutive flow-focusing channel geometries and lipid membranes are then formed through a controlled solvent extraction process. Since no strong solvents are used in the process, our method allows for the safe encapsulation and manipulation of an assortment of biological entities, including cells, proteins, and nucleic acids. The vesicles generated by this method are stable and have a shelf life of at least 3 months. Here, we demonstrate the cell-free in vitro synthesis of proteins within lipid vesicles as an initial step towards the development of an artificial cell.  相似文献   

18.
Jen CP  Chen WF 《Biomicrofluidics》2011,5(4):44105-4410511
Manipulating and discriminating biological cells of interest using microfluidic and micro total analysis system (μTAS) devices have potential applications in clinical diagnosis and medicine. Cellular focusing in microfluidic devices is a prerequisite for medical applications, such as cell sorting, cell counting, or flow cytometry. In the present study, an insulator-based dielectrophoretic microdevice is designed for the simultaneous filtration and focusing of biological cells. The cells are introduced into the microchannel and hydrodynamically pre-confined by funnel-shaped insulating structures close to the inlet. There are ten sets of X-patterned insulating structures in the microfluidic channel. The main function of the first five sets of insulating structures is to guide the cells by negative dielectrophoretic responses (viable HeLa cells) into the center region of the microchannel. The positive dielectrophoretic cells (dead HeLa cells) are attracted to regions with a high electric-field gradient generated at the edges of the insulating structures. The remaining five sets of insulating structures are mainly used to focus negative dielectrophoretic cells that have escaped from the upstream region. Experiments employing a mixture of dead and viable HeLa cells are conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed design. The results indicate that the performance of both filtration and focusing improves with the increasing strength of the applied electric field and a decreasing inlet sample flow rate, which agrees with the trend predicted by the numerical simulations. The filtration efficiency, which is quantitatively investigated, is up to 88% at an applied voltage of 50 V peak-to-peak (1 kHz) and a sample flow rate of 0.5 μl/min. The proposed device can focus viable cells into a single file using a voltage of 35 V peak-to-peak (1 kHz) at a sample flow rate of 1.0 μl/min.  相似文献   

19.
We observed and measured the fluid flow that was generated by an artificial cilium. The cilium was composed of superparamagnetic microspheres, in which magnetic dipole moments were induced by an external magnetic field. The interaction between the dipole moments resulted in formation of long chains-cilia, and the same external magnetic field was also used to drive the cilia in a periodic manner. Asymmetric periodic motion of the cilium resulted in generation of fluid flow and net pumping of the surrounding fluid. The flow and pumping performance were closely monitored by introducing small fluorescent tracer particles into the system. By detecting their motion, the fluid flow around an individual cilium was mapped and the flow velocities measured. We confirm that symmetric periodic beating of one cilium results in vortical motion only, whereas asymmetry is required for additional translational motion. We determine the effect of asymmetry on the pumping performance of a cilium, verify the theoretically predicted optimal pumping conditions, and determine the fluid behaviour around a linear array of three neighbouring cilia. In this case, the contributions of neighbouring cilia enhance the maximal flow velocity compared with a single cilium and contribute to a more uniform translational flow above the surface.  相似文献   

20.
Li X  Ballerini DR  Shen W 《Biomicrofluidics》2012,6(1):11301-1130113
"Paper-based microfluidics" or "lab on paper," as a burgeoning research field with its beginning in 2007, provides a novel system for fluid handling and fluid analysis for a variety of applications including health diagnostics, environmental monitoring as well as food quality testing. The reasons why paper becomes an attractive substrate for making microfluidic systems include: (1) it is a ubiquitous and extremely cheap cellulosic material; (2) it is compatible with many chemical/biochemical/medical applications; and (3) it transports liquids using capillary forces without the assistance of external forces. By building microfluidic channels on paper, liquid flow is confined within the channels, and therefore, liquid flow can be guided in a controlled manner. A variety of 2D and even 3D microfluidic channels have been created on paper, which are able to transport liquids in the predesigned pathways on paper. At the current stage of its development, paper-based microfluidic system is claimed to be low-cost, easy-to-use, disposable, and equipment-free, and therefore, is a rising technology particularly relevant to improving the healthcare and disease screening in the developing world, especially for those areas with no- or low-infrastructure and limited trained medical and health professionals. The research in paper-based microfluidics is experiencing a period of explosion; most published works have focused on: (1) inventing low-cost and simple fabrication techniques for paper-based microfluidic devices; and (2) exploring new applications of paper-based microfluidics by incorporating efficient detection methods. This paper aims to review both the fabrication techniques and applications of paper-based microfluidics reported to date. This paper also attempts to convey to the readers, from the authors' point of view the current limitations of paper-based microfluidics which require further research, and a few perspective directions this new analytical system may take in its development.  相似文献   

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