3 research outputs found
Raman-Activated Droplet Sorting (RADS) for Label-Free High-Throughput Screening of Microalgal Single-Cells
Raman-activated cell
sorting (RACS) has attracted increasing interest,
yet throughput remains one major factor limiting its broader application.
Here we present an integrated Raman-activated droplet sorting (RADS)
microfluidic system for functional screening of live cells in a label-free
and high-throughput manner, by employing AXT-synthetic industrial
microalga <i>Haematococcus pluvialis</i> (<i>H. pluvialis</i>) as a model. Raman microspectroscopy analysis of individual cells
is carried out prior to their microdroplet encapsulation, which is
then directly coupled to DEP-based droplet sorting. To validate the
system, <i>H. pluvialis</i> cells containing different levels
of AXT were mixed and underwent RADS. Those AXT-hyperproducing cells
were sorted with an accuracy of 98.3%, an enrichment ratio of eight
folds, and a throughput of ∼260 cells/min. Of the RADS-sorted
cells, 92.7% remained alive and able to proliferate, which is equivalent
to the unsorted cells. Thus, the RADS achieves a much higher throughput
than existing RACS systems, preserves the vitality of cells, and facilitates
seamless coupling with downstream manipulations such as single-cell
sequencing and cultivation
Reproducibility of fluorescent expression from engineered biological constructs in E. coli
We present results of the first large-scale interlaboratory study carried out in synthetic biology, as part of the 2014 and 2015 International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competitions. Participants at 88 institutions around the world measured fluorescence from three engineered constitutive constructs in E. coli. Few participants were able to measure absolute fluorescence, so data was analyzed in terms of ratios. Precision was strongly related to fluorescent strength, ranging from 1.54-fold standard deviation for the ratio between strong promoters to 5.75-fold for the ratio between the strongest and weakest promoter, and while host strain did not affect expression ratios, choice of instrument did. This result shows that high quantitative precision and reproducibility of results is possible, while at the same time indicating areas needing improved laboratory practices.Peer reviewe