4.6 Article

Microscopic evaluation of aqueous two-phase system emulsion characteristics enables rapid determination of critical polymer concentrations for solution micropatterning

Journal

ANALYST
Volume 142, Issue 11, Pages 1938-1945

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7an00255f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Nova Scotia Provincial Government (NSGS)
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CGS)
  3. Dalhousie University Faculty of Engineering (Exxon Mobile Canada Ltd)
  4. Canada Foundation for Innovation [33533]
  5. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2016-04298]
  6. Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation (Scotia Scholar)
  7. Canada Research Chairs Program

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Aqueous two-phase systems have emerged as valuable tools for microscale analysis of cell growth and many other biotechnology applications. The most critical step in developing an aqueous two-phase system for a specific application is identifying the critical concentrations at which the polymer solutions phase-separate. Current techniques for determining these critical concentrations rely on laborious methods, highly specialized assays or computational methods that make this step difficult for non-specialists. To overcome these limitations, we present a simplified assay that uses only readily accessible laboratory instruments and consumables (e.g., multichannel micropipettes, 96-well plates and a simple compound microscope) to determine the critical concentrations of aqueous two-phase system-forming polymers. We demonstrate that formulations selected from phase diagrams that describe these critical concentrations can be applied for solution micropatterning of cells.

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