4.5 Article

On-chip microfluidic buffer swap of biological samples in-line with downstream dielectrophoresis

Journal

ELECTROPHORESIS
Volume 43, Issue 12, Pages 1275-1282

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/elps.202100304

Keywords

dielectrophoresis; microfluidics; sample preparation; separation; tangential flows

Funding

  1. NSF [2051652]
  2. AFOSR [FA2386-21-1-4070]
  3. NCI Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA44579]
  4. CytoRecovery, Inc.
  5. Dir for Tech, Innovation, & Partnerships [2051652] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Translational Impacts [2051652] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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In this study, a microfluidic strategy on a chip is proposed to transfer cells into media tailored for dielectrophoresis. The strategy utilizes tangential flows of low media conductivity to transfer cells from physiological media into a lower conductivity media, maintaining laminarity of the flow-focused sample and minimizing cell dispersion across streamlines.
Microfluidic cell enrichment by dielectrophoresis, based on biophysical and electrophysiology phenotypes, requires that cells be resuspended from their physiological media into a lower conductivity buffer for enhancing force fields and enabling the dielectric contrast needed for separation. To ensure that sensitive cells are not subject to centrifugation for resuspension and spend minimal time outside of their culture media, we present an on-chip microfluidic strategy for swapping cells into media tailored for dielectrophoresis. This strategy transfers cells from physiological media into a 100-fold lower conductivity media by using tangential flows of low media conductivity at 200-fold higher flow rate versus sample flow to promote ion diffusion over the length of a straight channel architecture that maintains laminarity of the flow-focused sample and minimizes cell dispersion across streamlines. Serpentine channels are used downstream from the flow-focusing region to modulate hydrodynamic resistance of the central sample outlet versus flanking outlets that remove excess buffer, so that cell streamlines are collected in the exchanged buffer with minimal dilution in cell numbers and at flow rates that support dielectrophoresis. We envision integration of this on-chip sample preparation platform prior to or post-dielectrophoresis, in-line with on-chip monitoring of the outlet sample for metrics of media conductivity, cell velocity, cell viability, cell position, and collected cell numbers, so that the cell flow rate and streamlines can be tailored for enabling dielectrophoretic separations from heterogeneous samples.

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