Journal article icon

Journal article

Microfluidic, label-free enrichment of prostate cancer cells in blood based on acoustophoresis.

Abstract:
Circulating tumor cells (CTC) are shed in peripheral blood at advanced metastatic stages of solid cancers. Surface-marker-based detection of CTC predicts recurrence and survival in colorectal, breast, and prostate cancer. However, scarcity and variation in size, morphology, expression profile, and antigen exposure impairs reliable detection and characterization of CTC. We have developed a noncontact, label-free microfluidic acoustophoresis method to separate prostate cancer cells from white blood cells (WBC) through forces generated by ultrasonic resonances in microfluidic channels. Implementation of cell prealignment in a temperature-stabilized (±0.5 °C) acoustophoresis microchannel dramatically enhanced the discriminatory capacity and enabled the separation of 5 μm microspheres from 7 μm microspheres with 99% purity. Next, we determined the feasibility of employing label-free microfluidic acoustophoresis to discriminate and divert tumor cells from WBCs using erythrocyte-lysed blood from healthy volunteers spiked with tumor cells from three prostate cancer cell-lines (DU145, PC3, LNCaP). For cells fixed with paraformaldehyde, cancer cell recovery ranged from 93.6% to 97.9% with purity ranging from 97.4% to 98.4%. There was no detectable loss of cell viability or cell proliferation subsequent to the exposure of viable tumor cells to acoustophoresis. For nonfixed, viable cells, tumor cell recovery ranged from 72.5% to 93.9% with purity ranging from 79.6% to 99.7%. These data contribute proof-in-principle that label-free microfluidic acoustophoresis can be used to enrich both viable and fixed cancer cells from WBCs with very high recovery and purity.
Publication status:
Published

Actions


Access Document


Publisher copy:
10.1021/ac301723s

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Surgical Sciences
Role:
Author


Journal:
Analytical chemistry More from this journal
Volume:
84
Issue:
18
Pages:
7954-7962
Publication date:
2012-09-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1520-6882
ISSN:
0003-2700


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:365847
UUID:
uuid:8061ddfd-9676-4268-b1e3-545f8960e6cf
Local pid:
pubs:365847
Source identifiers:
365847
Deposit date:
2013-11-16

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP