4.8 Article

Multistage microfluidic cell sorting method and chip based on size and stiffness

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 237, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115451

Keywords

Microfluidic chip; Deterministic lateral displacement; Cone channel chip; Cell sorting

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In this study, a multistage microfluidic CTCs sorting method was presented, which involved size-based sorting using a two-array DLD chip, purification of CTCs mixed with leukocytes using a stiffness-based cone channel chip, and cell type identification using Raman techniques. The entire sorting process was label free, highly pure, high-throughput and efficient. The system developed with four parallelized DMC two-array DLD chips achieved a sample processing rate of 2.5 mL per minute with a recovery efficiency of 96.30 ± 2.10% and a purity of 98.25 ± 2.48%. A cone channel chip based on solid and hydrodynamic coupled analysis was developed to improve the purity of CTCs mixed with leukocytes by 1.8-fold.
High performance sorting of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from peripheral blood is key to liquid biopsies. Sizebased deterministic lateral displacement (DLD) technique is widely used in cell sorting. But conventional microcolumns have poor fluid regulation ability, which limits the sorting performance of DLD. When the size difference between CTCs and leukocytes is small (e.g., less than 3 & mu;m), not only DLD, many size-based separation techniques fail due to low specificity. CTCs have been confirmed to be softer than leukocytes, which could serve as a basis for sorting. In this study, we presented a multistage microfluidic CTCs sorting method, first sorting CTCs using a size-based two-array DLD chip, then purifying CTCs mixed by leukocytes using a stiffness-based cone channel chip, and finally identifying cell types using Raman techniques. The entire CTCs sorting and analysis process was label free, highly pure, high-throughput and efficient. The two-array DLD chip employed a droplet-shaped microcolumn (DMC) developed by optimization design rather than empirical design. Attributed to the excellent fluid regulation capability of DMC, the CTCs sorter system developed by parallelizing four DMC two-array DLD chips was able to process a sample of 2.5 mL per minute with a recovery efficiency of 96.30 & PLUSMN; 2.10% and a purity of 98.25 & PLUSMN; 2.48%. To isolate CTCs mixed dimensionally by leukocytes, a cone channel sorting method and chip were developed based on solid and hydrodynamic coupled analysis. The cone channel chip allowed CTCs to pass through the channel and entrap leukocytes, improving the purity of CTCs mixed by leukocytes by 1.8-fold.

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