Microfluidic devices for rapid label-free separation of cells and point-of-care diagnostics

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Abstract

Cell sorting serves an important role in clinical diagnosis and biological research. Most of the existing microscale sorting techniques are either non-specific to antigen type or rely on capturing cells making sample recovery difficult. We demonstrate a simple; yet effective technique for isolating cells in an antigen specific manner by using transient interactions of the cell surface antigens with asymmetric receptor patterned surface. Using microfluidic devices incorporating P-selectin patterns we demonstrate separation of HL60 cells from K562 cells. We achieved a sorting purity above 90% and efficiency greater than 85% with this system. We further demonstrate the clinical significance of the method by demonstrating single step separation of neutrophils from whole blood. When whole blood is introduced in the device, the granulocyte population gets separated exclusively yielding neutrophils of high purity (<10% contamination). To our knowledge, this is the first ever demonstration of continuous label free sorting of neutrophils from whole blood.

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Bose, S., Hollatz, M. H., Lee, C. H., Karp, J. M., & Karnik, R. (2012). Microfluidic devices for rapid label-free separation of cells and point-of-care diagnostics. In Technical Digest - Solid-State Sensors, Actuators, and Microsystems Workshop (pp. 237–238). Transducer Research Foundation. https://doi.org/10.31438/trf.hh2012.62

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