| Literature DB >> 25180800 |
M Castellarnau1, G L Szeto, H-W Su, T Tokatlian, J C Love, D J Irvine, J Voldman.
Abstract
This study presents stochastic particle barcoding (SPB), a method for tracking cell identity across bioanalytical platforms. In this approach, single cells or small collections of cells are co-encapsulated within an enzymatically-degradable hydrogel block along with a random collection of fluorescent beads, whose number, color, and position encode the identity of the cell, enabling samples to be transferred in bulk between single-cell assay platforms without losing the identity of individual cells. The application of SPB is demonstrated for transferring cells from a subnanoliter protein secretion/phenotyping array platform into a microtiter plate, with re-identification accuracies in the plate assay of 96±2%. Encapsulated cells are recovered by digesting the hydrogel, allowing subsequent genotyping and phenotyping of cell lysates. Finally, a model scaling is developed to illustrate how different parameters affect the accuracy of SPB and to motivate scaling of the method to thousands of unique blocks.Entities:
Keywords: barcodes; cells; hydrogels; lab-on-a-chip devices; labeling
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25180800 PMCID: PMC4303509 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201401369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281