6 research outputs found

    Cell Aggregate Dissociation and Filtration Through the Use of Nylon Woven Mesh Membranes

    No full text
    Advances in the field of microfluidics show great promise for enhancing the fight against cancer. This technology enables the medical field to obtain more detailed information– specifically molecular characteristics of tumor cells. These molecular characteristics can provide additional information to make more accurate, earlier diagnoses and provide additional treatment options. The Haun Lab’s dissociation device provided the first stride towards reaching those targets. It mechanically disrupts aggregates and produces a sample containing majority singlets, enabling more accurate analysis results. The addition of a filtering mechanism to the outlet of this device will improve upon this concentration of singlets, while also providing a connection between sample preparation and analysis resulting in an increase in tumor cell yield.A filter device was proposed to provide different processing tasks – 1.) partial disruption of lingering aggregates into singlets and 2.) concentration of singlets to undergo molecular analysis. Characterization of the filter device was conducted through a series of experiments that narrowed down pore size performance, filtration efficiency, and aggregate disruption. The direct-flow experiments showed an increase in singlet count with decreasing pore size, until a size limit was reached. There was also an observed 5% decrease in aggregates when incorporating the SEFAR 15µm filter. Due to the membrane’s well-define aperture structure, it was more than ideal for Filter 1. To improve filter efficiency, a tangential-filter device model was created. When this device was set to withdraw 80% of the effluent from the top outlet and 20% from the bottom, it became more efficient at generating singlets at higher flow rates

    Microfluidic device for mechanical dissociation of cancer cell aggregates into single cells

    No full text
    Tumors tissues house a diverse array of cell types, requiring powerful cell-based analysis methods to characterize cellular heterogeneity and identify rare cells. Tumor tissue is dissociated into single cells by treatment with proteolytic enzymes, followed by mechanical disruption using vortexing or pipetting. These procedures can be incomplete and require significant time, and the latter mechanical treatments are poorly defined and controlled. Here, we present a novel microfluidic device to improve mechanical dissociation of digested tissue and cell aggregates into single cells. The device design includes a network of branching channels that range in size from millimeters down to hundreds of microns. The channels also contain flow constrictions that generate well-defined regions of high shear force, which we refer to as "hydrodynamic micro-scalpels", to progressively disaggregate tissue fragments and clusters into single cells. We show using in vitro cancer cell models that the microfluidic device significantly enhances cell recovery in comparison to mechanical disruption by pipetting and vortexing after digestion with trypsin or incubation with EDTA. Notably, the device enabled superior results to be obtained after shorter proteolytic digestion times, resulting in fully viable cells in less than ten minutes. The device could also be operated under enzyme-free conditions that could better maintain expression of certain surface markers. The microfluidic format is advantageous because it enables application of well-defined mechanical forces and rapid processing times. Furthermore, it may be possible to directly integrate downstream processing and detection operations to create integrated cell-based analysis platforms. The enhanced capabilities enabled by our novel device may help promote applications of single cell detection and purification techniques to tumor tissue specimens, advancing the current understanding of cancer biology and enabling molecular diagnostics in clinical settings

    Microfluidic channel optimization to improve hydrodynamic dissociation of cell aggregates and tissue.

    No full text
    Maximizing the speed and efficiency at which single cells can be liberated from tissues would dramatically advance cell-based diagnostics and therapies. Conventional methods involve numerous manual processing steps and long enzymatic digestion times, yet are still inefficient. In previous work, we developed a microfluidic device with a network of branching channels to improve the dissociation of cell aggregates into single cells. However, this device was not tested on tissue specimens, and further development was limited by high cost and low feature resolution. In this work, we utilized a single layer, laser micro-machined polyimide film as a rapid prototyping tool to optimize the design of our microfluidic channels to maximize dissociation efficiency. This resulted in a new design with smaller dimensions and a shark fin geometry, which increased recovery of single cells from cancer cell aggregates. We then tested device performance on mouse kidney tissue, and found that optimal results were obtained using two microfluidic devices in series, the larger original design followed by the new shark fin design as a final polishing step. We envision our microfluidic dissociation devices being used in research and clinical settings to generate single cells from various tissue specimens for diagnostic and therapeutic applications
    corecore