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Download fileTunable “Nano-Shearing”: A Physical Mechanism to Displace Nonspecific Cell Adhesion During Rare Cell Detection
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posted on 2014-02-18, 00:00 authored by Ramanathan Vaidyanathan, Muhammad J. A. Shiddiky, Sakandar Rauf, Eloïse Dray, Zhikai Tay, Matt TrauWe report a tunable alternating current electro-hydrodynamic
(ac-EHD) force which drives lateral fluid motion within a few nanometers
of an electrode surface. Because the magnitude of this fluid shear
force can be tuned externally (e.g., via the application
of an ac electric field), it provides a new capability to physically
displace weakly (nonspecifically) bound cellular analytes. To demonstrate
the utility of the tunable nanoshearing phenomenon,
we present data on purpose-built microfluidic devices that employ
ac-EHD force to remove nonspecific adsorption of molecular and cellular
species. Here, we show that an ac-EHD device containing asymmetric
planar and microtip electrode pairs resulted in a 4-fold reduction
in nonspecific adsorption of blood cells and also captured breast
cancer cells in blood, with high efficiency (approximately 87%) and
specificity. We therefore feel that this new capability of externally
tuning and manipulating fluid flow could have wide applications as
an innovative approach to enhance the specific capture of rare cells
such as cancer cells in blood.