| Literature DB >> 35969307 |
Sungryul Park1, Sangwook Lee2, Hyun Soo Kim3, Hong Jin Choi4, Ok Chan Jeong5, Ruixian Lin1, Younghak Cho6, Min-Ho Lee7.
Abstract
Flow cytometry has become an indispensable tool for counting, analyzing, and sorting large cell populations in biological research and medical practice. Unfortunately, it has limitations in the analysis of non-spherically shaped cells due to the variation of their alignment with respect to the flow direction and, hence, the optical interrogation axis, resulting in unreliable cell analysis. Here, we present a simple on-chip acoustofluidic method to fix the orientation of ellipsoidal cells and focus them into a single, aligned stream. Specifically, by generating acoustic standing waves inside a 100 ⋅ 100 µm square-shaped microchannel, we successfully aligned and focused up to 97.7% of a population of Euglena gracilis (an ellipsoidal shaped microalgal species) cells in the center of the microchannel with high precision at a volume rate of 25 to 200 µL min-1. Uniform positioning of ellipsoidal cells is essential for making flow cytometry applicable to the investigation of a greater variety of cell populations and is expected to be beneficial for ecological studies and aquaculture.Entities:
Keywords: Acoustic focusing; Acoustofluidics; Flow cytometry; Microalgae; Microfluidics
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35969307 DOI: 10.1007/s00604-022-05439-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mikrochim Acta ISSN: 0026-3672 Impact factor: 6.408