posted on 2018-09-28, 00:00authored bySurath Gomis, Mahmoud Labib, Brenda L. K. Coles, Derek van der Kooy, Edward H. Sargent, Shana O. Kelley
Retinal
stem cells (RSCs) are promising candidates for patient-derived
cell therapy to repair damage to the eye; however, RSCs are rare in
retinal samples and lack validated markers, making cell sorting a
significant challenge. Here we report a high-resolution deterministic
lateral displacement microfluidic device that profiles RSCs in distinct
size populations. Only by developing a chip that promotes cell tumbling
do we limit cell deformation through apertured channels and thereby
increase the size-sorting resolution of the device. We systematically
explore a spectrum of microstructures, including optimized notched
pillars, to study and then rationally promote cell tumbling. We find
that RSCs exhibit larger diameters than most ciliary epithelial cells,
an insight into RSC morphology that allows enrichment from biological
samples.