| Literature DB >> 33282849 |
Vera Ortseifen1, Martina Viefhues2, Lutz Wobbe3, Alexander Grünberger4.
Abstract
Microfluidics and novel lab-on-a-chip applications have the potential to boost biotechnological research in ways that are not possible using traditional methods. Although microfluidic tools were increasingly used for different applications within biotechnology in recent years, a systematic and routine use in academic and industrial labs is still not established. For many years, absent innovative, ground-breaking and "out-of-the-box" applications have been made responsible for the missing drive to integrate microfluidic technologies into fundamental and applied biotechnological research. In this review, we highlight microfluidics' offers and compare them to the most important demands of the biotechnologists. Furthermore, a detailed analysis in the state-of-the-art use of microfluidics within biotechnology was conducted exemplarily for four emerging biotechnological fields that can substantially benefit from the application of microfluidic systems, namely the phenotypic screening of cells, the analysis of microbial population heterogeneity, organ-on-a-chip approaches and the characterisation of synthetic co-cultures. The analysis resulted in a discussion of potential "gaps" that can be responsible for the rare integration of microfluidics into biotechnological studies. Our analysis revealed six major gaps, concerning the lack of interdisciplinary communication, mutual knowledge and motivation, methodological compatibility, technological readiness and missing commercialisation, which need to be bridged in the future. We conclude that connecting microfluidics and biotechnology is not an impossible challenge and made seven suggestions to bridge the gaps between those disciplines. This lays the foundation for routine integration of microfluidic systems into biotechnology research procedures.Entities:
Keywords: biotechnology; droplet microfluidics; interdisciplinary research; microfluidics; organ-on-a-chip; single-cell analysis; single-cell cultivation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33282849 PMCID: PMC7691494 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.589074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
FIGURE 1Overview of the offers of microfluidics toolboxes vs. the demands arising from biotechnological research.
FIGURE 2The discrepancy between biotechnologists’ expectations and the state-of-the-art in microfluidics. One suggestion for bridging the gap and the missing connection between both fields could be a “chip in a box” solution, combining microfluidic chip and all necessary periphery in one setup for conducting the experiment.
FIGURE 3Identification of respective gaps, that prevent the interdisciplinary research (A) and suggestions to bridge the discussed gaps between microfluidics and biotechnology in the future (B).