| Literature DB >> 28432341 |
Éva Sautner1, Krisztián Papp2, Eszter Holczer3, Eszter L Tóth3,4, Rita Ungai-Salánki5, Bálint Szabó6,7, Péter Fürjes3, József Prechl8,9.
Abstract
Microfluidic devices exploit combined physical, chemical and biological phenomena that could be unique in the sub-millimeter dimensions. The current goal of development of Point-of-Care (POC) medical devices is to extract the biomedical information from the blood. We examined the characteristics of blood flow in autonomous microfluidic devices with the aim to realize sensitive detection of interactions between particulate elements of the blood and the appropriately modified surfaces of the system. As a model experiment we demonstrated the fast analysis of the AB0 blood group system. We observed that the accumulation of red blood cells immobilized on the capillary wall leads to increased lateral movement of the flowing cells, resulting in the overall selective deceleration of the red blood cell flow column compared to the plasma fraction. We showed that by monitoring the flow rate characteristics in capillaries coated with blood type reagents it is possible to identify red blood cell types. Analysis of hydrodynamic effects governing blood flow by Finite Element Method based modelling supported our observations. Our proof-of-concept results point to a novel direction in blood analysis in autonomous microfluidic systems and also provide the basis for the construction of a simple quantitative device for blood group determination.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28432341 PMCID: PMC5430922 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-01166-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1RBC dimensions and design of microfluidic chamber. (a) A scanning electron microscopic picture and a cross-sectional view of a red blood cell that indicates it’s shape and average dimensions. (b) The photo shows the capillary system filled by blood. (c) The microfluidic device was formed by aligned attachment of PDMS-PEO based flow cell containing microfluidic channels onto slides functionalized by anti-A and anti-B reagents in the indicated regions. The left panel presents the cross-sectional view of the winding channel.
Characteristics of the AB0 blood groups.
| Blood group | 0 | A | B | AB |
| RBC antigens | — | A | B | A & B |
| Serum antibodies | anti -A & B antibody | anti-B antibody | anti-A antibody | — |
Figure 2RBC retardation and plasma separation. (a) Graph shows the time that needed for a blood group B blood to reach the second loop (indicated by arrowhead in panel b) in the two arms functionalized by anti-A or anti-B group specific antibodies. The experiment was repeated 4 times, data pairs of the same run are represented by identical symbols. (b) A picture taken at the end of experiment (7 min) shows that the plasma separated from red blood cells only in the arm that was functionalized by anti-B antibodies. (c) Graph presents the length of RBC or plasma of a blood group B blood in the two arms at the end of experiment. (d) Light microscopic and (e) SEM pictures shows that RBC’s binds to the functionalized area.
Figure 3Attached cells in the trapping region perturb the motion of moving cells and force them perpendicular directions to the flow. Routs of moving RBC’s were analysed in the capture region in case of two different bound cell density (right and left panel). (a) Two microscopic pictures about the capillary taken in delayed time points (pink and light blue colours) were overlaid to visualize the attached cells (dark blue). Field of vision was divided to four equal regions those were analysed separately, the 2–4 regions were functionalized as indicated. (b) Positions of bound cells were indicated by black dots for better visualization. (c) Trajectories of 30–30 moving RBC’s were analysed. (d) Graph shows the SD of movement of cells in perpendicular direction to the flow of blood. Friedman and Dunn’s statistical tests were applied to reveal significant differences (*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001, n = 30).
Figure 4(a) Lateral projection of the FEM modelled RBC trajectories over the trapped cells in case of 5 μm and 2.5 μm starting z position. Arrows indicate the direction of simulated flow. (b) Simulated particle trajectories over the functionalized area of the microfluidic system in case of different trapped cell coverage on the surface of the 100 × 100 μm2 area. (c) Cumulated side movement (in y and z directions) of the RBCs crossing the functionalized area covered by bound cells (FEM model).
Figure 5Effect of various hematocrit values on blood group determination. The hematocrit of blood was artificially set to the three indicated value in case of blood samples from the four different blood groups (A, B, AB, 0) then tested in microfluidic channel system where the two arms were functionalized by anti-A or anti-B group antibodies. The length of RBC and separated plasma regions are indicated by grey or striped columns. Graph shows representative results from three replicates.
Comparison of widely used agglutination methods (slide, tube microplate or column/gel filtration format)[8] and the presented flow retardation microfluidic assay.
| Agglutination methods in general | Flow retardation microfluidic assay | |
|---|---|---|
| Blood required | >10 µl | 3 µl |
| Assay duration | >10 min | 7 min |
| Quantitation | only with instrument | manually possible |
| Price | variable | >slide |
| Reverse typing | possible | not possible |
| Sample preparation | pipetting/mixing/centrifugation etc. | no preanalytical steps |