In this paper, we present a novel electrofusion device that enables massive parallelism, using an electrically insulating sheet having a two-dimensional micro-orifice array. The sheet is sandwiched by a pair of micro-chambers with immersed electrodes, and each chamber is filled with the suspensions of the two types of cells to be fused. Dielectrophoresis, assisted by sedimentation, is used to position the cells in the upper chamber down onto the orifices, then the device is flipped over to position the cells on the other side, so that cell pairs making contact in the orifice are formed. When a pulse voltage is applied to the electrodes, most voltage drop occurs around the orifice and impressed on the cell membrane in the orifice. This makes possible the application of size-independent voltage to fuse two cells in contact at all orifices exclusively in 1:1 manner. In the experiment, cytoplasm of one of the cells is stained with a fluorescence dye, and the transfer of the fluorescence to the other cell is used as the indication of fusion events. The two-dimensional orifice arrangement at the pitch of 50 μm realizes simultaneous fusion of 6 × 10³ cells on a 4 mm diameter chip, and the fusion yield of 78-90% is achieved for various sizes and types of cells.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/elps.201100129 | DOI Listing |
Micromachines (Basel)
January 2020
Institute of Non-traditional Machining & Equipment, Henan Polytechnic University, Jiaozuo 454000, China.
A seamless thin-walled hollow metallic cylinder with array of micro-perforations is one of the key components for some products. Normally, these micro-perforations are formed by removing material from the given metallic hollow cylinder (pipe or tube) one by one or row by row. To efficiently and flexibly manufacture such a highly perforated hollow cylinder, this paper proposed a hybrid technique combining extrusion moulding process and electroforming process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrophoresis
September 2011
Department of Bioengineering, the University of Tokyo, Japan.
In this paper, we present a novel electrofusion device that enables massive parallelism, using an electrically insulating sheet having a two-dimensional micro-orifice array. The sheet is sandwiched by a pair of micro-chambers with immersed electrodes, and each chamber is filled with the suspensions of the two types of cells to be fused. Dielectrophoresis, assisted by sedimentation, is used to position the cells in the upper chamber down onto the orifices, then the device is flipped over to position the cells on the other side, so that cell pairs making contact in the orifice are formed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicro-orifice based cell fusion assures high-yield fusion without compromising the cell viability. This paper examines feasibility of a dielectrophoresis (DEP) assisted cell trapping method for parallel fusion with a micro-orifice array. The goal is to create viable fusants for studying postfusion cell behavior.
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