Artigo Revisado por pares

Electric Manipulation of Bioparticles and Macromolecules on Microfabricated Electrodes

2001; American Chemical Society; Volume: 73; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/ac001109s

ISSN

1520-6882

Autores

Ying Huang, Karla L. Ewalt, Marcus Tirado, Robert Haigis, Anita H. Forster, Donald E. Ackley, Michael J. Heller, James P. O'Connel, Michael Krihak,

Tópico(s)

Biosensors and Analytical Detection

Resumo

Bioparticle separation, bioparticle enrichment, and electric field-mediated immune detection were carried out on microfabricated semiconductor chips utilizing ac and dc electric fields. Microscale separation on a chip surface having an active area of ∼16 mm2 was demonstrated for a mixture of Bacillus globigii spores and Escherichia coli bacteria. Dielectrophoretic enrichment was performed by collecting target bioparticles from a flow stream in flow cells of ∼7.5 μL, achieving a 20-fold increase in the concentration of E. coli bacteria from a diluted sample, a 28-fold enrichment for peripheral blood mononuclear cells from red blood cells, and a 30-fold increase in white blood cells from diluted whole blood. The ability to manipulate and collect bioparticles and macromolecules at microfabricated electrodes with ac and dc fields was further illustrated in electric field-mediated immunoassays for analyzing the biological identities of E. coli bacteria and B. globigii spores. According to these results, the electric methods for manipulating bioparticles present themselves as viable techniques for novel biomedical applications in sample preparations and biochemical assays on microelectrode arrays.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX