| Literature DB >> 24662940 |
Peter R C Gascoyne1, Sangjo Shim2.
Abstract
Dielectrophoresis (DEP) is an electrokinetic method that allows intrinsic dielectric properties of suspended cells to be exploited for discrimination and separation. It has emerged as a promising method for isolating circulation tumor cells (CTCs) from blood. DEP-isolation of CTCs is independent of cell surface markers. Furthermore, isolated CTCs are viable and can be maintained in culture, suggesting that DEP methods should be more generally applicable than antibody-based approaches. The aim of this article is to review and synthesize for both oncologists and biomedical engineers interested in CTC isolation the pertinent characteristics of DEP and CTCs. The aim is to promote an understanding of the factors involved in realizing DEP-based instruments having both sufficient discrimination and throughput to allow routine analysis of CTCs in clinical practice. The article brings together: (a) the principles of DEP; (b) the biological basis for the dielectric differences between CTCs and blood cells; (c) why such differences are expected to be present for all types of tumors; and (d) instrumentation requirements to process 10 mL blood specimens in less than 1 h to enable routine clinical analysis. The force equilibrium method of dielectrophoretic field-flow fractionation (DEP-FFF) is shown to offer higher discrimination and throughput than earlier DEP trapping methods and to be applicable to clinical studies.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24662940 PMCID: PMC3980488 DOI: 10.3390/cancers6010545
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Deflection of electric field lines (gray lines) originating from electrodes (black bars) by mammalian cells. (A) In a low frequency electric field, an intact cell membrane accumulates charges that repel the field lines around the cell. If the field is homogeneous, then the perturbed field pattern will be symmetrical above and below the cell. No net force on the cell results; (B) If the electrode system imposes an inhomogeneous electric field, then the displacement of field lines is asymmetrical above and below the cell. This leads to a spatial energy gradient and a dielectrophoretic (DEP) force that pushes cells away from the high field region where the field lines are close together; (C) If the cell membrane is leaky and presents no barrier to the field, or if the applied field is at the cell crossover frequency, or if the field frequency is very high and the cell interior conductivity matches that of the suspending medium, then the field lines are not perturbed and the cell experiences no F even in an inhomogeneous field; (D) At high frequencies, field lines are deflected towards the cell interior if the cell internal conductivity exceeds that of the suspending medium. In this case, the resultant energy gradient provides an F that pulls the cell towards high field regions.
Figure 2The DEP responses of mammalian cells may be understood in terms of dielectric shell models [66,67,68]. In (A) the cell is represented as a homogeneous core (the cytoplasm) surrounded by a thin, homogeneous shell (the lipid bilayer membrane). This model describes the perfectly smooth, idealized cell shown in (B); In reality, mammalian cells have surface morphological features such as those represented in (D) that are covered by lipid bilayer membrane and that increase the cell surface area compared to the smooth idealized cell; (C) These morphological features can be taken into account by introducing a folding factor ϕ into the shell model to represents the ratio of actual lipid bilayer area to that of the idealized smooth shell. Symbols: ε and σ refer to the real permittivity and conductivity, respectfully, of the cell components denoted by the subscripts s, mem and in, which refer to the suspending medium, plasma membrane and cell interior, respectively. ϕ is the membrane folding factor (see text).
Figure 4Morphological aspects of circulating tumor cells derived from solid tissues illustrated in 2D. (A) The minimum surface area cells can possess when they form solid tissue occurs when in a uniform stacked conformation. In this arrangement, the surface area of the cells exceeds that of smooth spherical cells of the same volume by a factor ϕ = ≈ 1.24; (B) Tumor cells become disorganized as tumor grade increases, leading to increased cell surface area; (C) As tumor cells enter the circulation and round up into spheres, their surfaces wrinkle to accommodate their membrane area (D) leading to a low DEP crossover frequency; (E) Cell membrane area is shed in large vesicles when cancer cells persist in suspension [78]. Nevertheless, the membrane folding factor of the cells still remains high; (F) MDA-MB-231 cells in suspension immediately following harvest showing excess membrane and gross folding. (G) The same cells after being maintained in suspension for 2 h. Despite the loss of large vesicles carrying away cytoplasm and membrane, the cell membranes retain a much higher folding factor than blood cells [78].
Figure 3The DEP responses of cancer and normal blood cells expressed in terms of the reciprocal cell dielectric phenotype 1/(R∙ϕ), which is proportional to the DEP crossover frequency that determines the behavior of the cells in DEP manipulation and isolation applications. Each line shows the distribution of crossover frequencies among cells of a single cell type. Cell types are color-coded by organ of origin. The results show that there are striking differences between the DEP properties of blood cells and cells of solid tumor origin and that leukemia cells display intermediate properties. More details of these data, including a description of the cell type names, origin and methods of measurement have been published elsewhere [28,29].
Parameter requirements for isolating cancer cells by DEP for clinical applications.
| Parameter | Practical Requirement | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Specimen condition | Cells must have intact membrane barrier function | Membrane barrier function must be intact for DEP to discriminate between cells based on their plasma membrane morphology. Also, cells undergo large dielectric changes in early apoptosis, so stressed specimens are undesirable. |
| Specimen volume | 7 to 10 mL | CTCs are so rare that an accepted working volume to allow for meaningful analysis is around 10 mL |
| Processing time | <60 min | It is generally accepted that an instrument to make analysis of CTCs a widespread, routine, clinically-relevant procedure needs to be able to process at least one specimen an hour. |
| Cell throughput | ≥106 cells·min-1 | Even with pre-processing of specimens to remove erythrocytes by lysis or density-gradient separation, a 10 mL specimen contains ~4 × 107 nucleated cells, requiring a high throughput rate to achieve processing of a 10 mL specimen within 60 min. |
| Suspending medium conductivity | <500 mS·m−1 and usually <100 mS·m−1 | To exploit both positive and negative DEP for cell discrimination, the suspending medium must be of much lower conductivity than the cell cytoplasm, which is ~1,400 mS·m−1 due to its physiological ion concentration. The electric current and Joule heating caused by the DEP signal also depends on the suspending medium conductivity. |
| Suspending medium osmolarity | >200 mOs·kg−1 and usually ~300 mOs·kg−1 | Usually DEP is applied in a suspending medium of low ionic conductivity in which physiological osmolarity (~300 mOs·kg−1) is maintained with a non-conductive osmolyte such as sucrose or mannitol. However, osmolarity could be modified substantially to alter cell DEP properties as long as it did not damage the target cancer cell membrane integrity through osmotic stress. |
| DEP frequency | f > 15 kHz | The DEP frequency is chosen to impose differential forces on the cell types to be separated in accordance with the cell crossover frequencies at the chosen suspending medium conductivity. At low frequencies, charge injection from electrodes becomes greater, increasing the production of electrochemical species that can damage cells. At a conductivity of 30 mS·m−1, cells can be protected from such damage for f > 15 kHz by inclusion of catalase in the suspending medium. |
| Electric field strength | <5 × 105 V·m−1 in the highest field regions to which cancer cells are exposed | |
| Cell residency time | <400 s | Once cells are suspended in a low conductivity medium, their internal ions begin to leak out, causing their DEP properties to change with time. Tumor cells tend to be leakier than normal cells and their exposure to high field regions during DEP manipulation can induce still faster ion leakage (see Electric Field above). Cell residency time should be short to avert complications caused by changing cell DEP properties. |