Acoustophoretic sorting of viable mammalian cells in a microfluidic device.

Anal Chem

Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA.

Published: December 2012

We report the first use of ultrasonic acoustophoresis for the label-free separation of viable and nonviable mammalian cells within a microfluidic device. Cells that have undergone apoptosis are physically smaller than viable cells, and our device exploits this fact to achieve efficient sorting based on the strong size dependence of acoustic radiation forces within a microchannel. As a model, we have selectively enriched viable MCF-7 breast tumor cells from heterogeneous mixtures of viable and nonviable cells. We found that this mode of separation is gentle and enables efficient, label-free isolation of viable cells from mixed samples containing 10(6) cells/mL at flow rates of up to 12 mL/h. We have extensively characterized the device, and we report the effects of piezoelectric voltage and sample flow rate on device performance and describe how these parameters can be tuned to optimize recovery, purity, or throughput.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3677785PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac3026674DOI Listing

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