Publications by authors named "Tieying Xu"

Article Synopsis
  • Combining microfluidics and sensors creates advanced analysis systems, allowing for electrical sensing and analysis within tiny fluid channels.
  • The paper outlines the challenges in connecting these microfluidic networks with electrical components and presents a new device for studying red blood cell flow.
  • Results include the device's ability to distinguish red blood cells affected by sickle cell disease, highlighting its potential for clinical applications.
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This paper describes the use of a microfluidic device comprising channels with dimensions mimicking those of the smallest capillaries found in the human microcirculation. The device structure, associated with a pair of microelectrodes, provides a tool to electrically measure the transit time of red blood cells through fine capillaries and thus generate an electrical signature for red blood cells in the context of human erythroid genetic disorders, such as sickle cell disease or hereditary spherocytosis, in which red cell elasticity is altered. Red blood cells from healthy individuals, heated or not, and red blood cells from patients with sickle cell disease or hereditary spherocytosis where characterized at a single cell level using our device.

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The human red blood cell is a biconcave disc of 6-8 × 2 μm that is highly elastic. This capacity to deform enables it to stretch while circulating through narrow capillaries to ensure its main function of gas exchange. Red cell shape and deformability are altered in membrane disorders because of defects in skeletal or membrane proteins affecting protein-protein interactions.

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