4.7 Article

Microparticles with tunable, cell-like properties for quantitative acoustic mechanophenotyping

Journal

MICROSYSTEMS & NANOENGINEERING
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41378-023-00556-6

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Mechanical properties of biological cells can be measured at scale using emerging microfluidic technologies, which are significantly faster than conventional instrumentation. However, there is a lack of precise and repeatable calibration methods due to the natural variability of cells. This study presents the development of tunable microparticles that can be used for efficient high-throughput measurements of mechanical properties at single-cell resolution.
Mechanical properties of biological cells have been shown to correlate with their biomolecular state and function, and therefore methods to measure these properties at scale are of interest. Emerging microfluidic technologies can measure the mechanical properties of cells at rates over 20,000 cells/s, which is more than four orders of magnitude faster than conventional instrumentation. However, precise and repeatable means to calibrate and test these new tools remain lacking, since cells themselves are by nature variable. Commonly, microfluidic tools use rigid polymer microspheres for calibration because they are widely available in cell-similar sizes, but conventional microspheres do not fully capture the physiological range of other mechanical properties that are equally important to device function (e.g., elastic modulus and density). Here, we present for the first time development of monodisperse polyacrylamide microparticles with both tunable elasticity and tunable density. Using these size, elasticity, and density tunable particles, we characterized a custom acoustic microfluidic device that makes single-cell measurements of mechanical properties. We then applied the approach to measure the distribution of the acoustic properties within samples of human leukocytes and showed that the system successfully discriminates lymphocytes from other leukocytes. This initial demonstration shows how the tunable microparticles with properties within the physiologically relevant range can be used in conjunction with microfluidic devices for efficient high-throughput measurements of mechanical properties at single-cell resolution.

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