Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification

Engineering cells with agent-loaded particles has been utilised to multiple research applications. It not only plays a significant role in bioimaging, which facilitates the monitoring of cell administration, but also boosts native cell properties that can be used in therapeutic applications. When lo...

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Main Author: Zhou, Yingying
Other Authors: Xu Chenjie
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65029
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-650292023-03-03T15:34:19Z Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification Zhou, Yingying Xu Chenjie School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering Engineering cells with agent-loaded particles has been utilised to multiple research applications. It not only plays a significant role in bioimaging, which facilitates the monitoring of cell administration, but also boosts native cell properties that can be used in therapeutic applications. When loading cells with nanoparticles, the presence of unbound particles could cause problems such as: free bioimaging agents confound precise identification of labeled cells. Excessive free transformative agents can act on non-target cells, complicating therapeutic outcomes. Furthermore, excess particles can be a source of significant cytotoxicity. Therefore, we established a new microfluidic technology, Dean Flow Fractionation, to achieve efficiently remove unbound particles from both suspension and adherent cells. We demonstrated that Dean Flow Fractionation depletes more unbound particles than centrifugation and purified labelled cells can be continuously collected for downstream applications. We also illustrated that unbound particles are able to transfer bioimaging agents to non-target cells and transformative agents can affect cells’ physiology. This study suggests that Dean Flow Fractionation is a novel cell purification strategy and its high separation efficacy minimizes concerns regarding safety and false positive contrast. This allows particle-based cell engineering methods to fulfil its potential without bioimaging or off-target interference. Bachelor of Engineering (Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering) 2015-06-11T02:00:05Z 2015-06-11T02:00:05Z 2015 2015 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65029 en Nanyang Technological University 55 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
Zhou, Yingying
Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification
description Engineering cells with agent-loaded particles has been utilised to multiple research applications. It not only plays a significant role in bioimaging, which facilitates the monitoring of cell administration, but also boosts native cell properties that can be used in therapeutic applications. When loading cells with nanoparticles, the presence of unbound particles could cause problems such as: free bioimaging agents confound precise identification of labeled cells. Excessive free transformative agents can act on non-target cells, complicating therapeutic outcomes. Furthermore, excess particles can be a source of significant cytotoxicity. Therefore, we established a new microfluidic technology, Dean Flow Fractionation, to achieve efficiently remove unbound particles from both suspension and adherent cells. We demonstrated that Dean Flow Fractionation depletes more unbound particles than centrifugation and purified labelled cells can be continuously collected for downstream applications. We also illustrated that unbound particles are able to transfer bioimaging agents to non-target cells and transformative agents can affect cells’ physiology. This study suggests that Dean Flow Fractionation is a novel cell purification strategy and its high separation efficacy minimizes concerns regarding safety and false positive contrast. This allows particle-based cell engineering methods to fulfil its potential without bioimaging or off-target interference.
author2 Xu Chenjie
author_facet Xu Chenjie
Zhou, Yingying
format Final Year Project
author Zhou, Yingying
author_sort Zhou, Yingying
title Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification
title_short Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification
title_full Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification
title_fullStr Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification
title_full_unstemmed Microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification
title_sort microfluidic buffer exchange for particle-based cell engineering and purification
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65029
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