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Centrifugal microfluidics for sorting immune cells from whole blood.

Citation
Yu, Z. T. F., et al. “Centrifugal Microfluidics For Sorting Immune Cells From Whole Blood.”. Sensors And Actuators. B, Chemical, pp. 1050-1061.
Center University of Michigan
Author Zeta Tak For Yu, Jophin George Joseph, Shirley Xiaosu Liu, Mei Ki Cheung, Parker James Haffey, Katsuo Kurabayashi, Jianping Fu
Keywords Blood cell sorting, Centrifugation, Immune cells, Microfluidics
Abstract

Sorting and enumeration of immune cells from blood are critical operations involved in many clinical applications. Conventional methods for sorting and counting immune cells from blood, such as flow cytometry and hemocytometers, are tedious, inaccurate, and difficult for implementation for point-of-care (POC) testing. Herein we developed a microscale centrifugal technology termed Centrifugal Microfluidic Chip (CMC) capable of sorting immune cells from blood and cellular analysis in a laboratory setting. Operation of the CMC entailed a blood specimen layered on a density gradient medium and centrifuged in microfluidic channels where immune cell subpopulations could rapidly be sorted into distinct layers according to their density differentials. We systematically studied effects of different blocking molecules for surface passivation of the CMC. We further demonstrated the applicability of CMCs for rapid separation of minimally processed human whole blood without affecting immune cell viability. Multi-color imaging and analysis of immune cell distributions and enrichment such as recovery and purity rates of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were demonstrated using CMCs. Given its design and operation simplicity, portability, blood cell sorting efficiency, and cellular analysis capability, the CMC holds promise for blood-based diagnosis and disease monitoring in POC applications.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Sensors and actuators. B, Chemical
Volume
245
Number of Pages
1050-1061
Date Published
06/2017
ISSN Number
0925-4005
DOI
10.1016/j.snb.2017.01.113
Alternate Journal
Sens Actuators B Chem
PMID
28966475
PMCID
PMC5619665
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