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A comparison of microfluidic methods for high-throughput cell deformability measurements.

Marta UrbanskaHector Enrique MunozJosephine BagnallOliver OttoScott R ManalisDino Di CarloJochen Guck
Published in: Nature methods (2020)
The mechanical phenotype of a cell is an inherent biophysical marker of its state and function, with many applications in basic and applied biological research. Microfluidics-based methods have enabled single-cell mechanophenotyping at throughputs comparable to those of flow cytometry. Here, we present a standardized cross-laboratory study comparing three microfluidics-based approaches for measuring cell mechanical phenotype: constriction-based deformability cytometry (cDC), shear flow deformability cytometry (sDC) and extensional flow deformability cytometry (xDC). All three methods detect cell deformability changes induced by exposure to altered osmolarity. However, a dose-dependent deformability increase upon latrunculin B-induced actin disassembly was detected only with cDC and sDC, which suggests that when exposing cells to the higher strain rate imposed by xDC, cellular components other than the actin cytoskeleton dominate the response. The direct comparison presented here furthers our understanding of the applicability of the different deformability cytometry methods and provides context for the interpretation of deformability measurements performed using different platforms.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • high throughput
  • rna seq
  • flow cytometry
  • cell therapy
  • oxidative stress
  • circulating tumor cells
  • spinal cord injury
  • diabetic rats
  • neuropathic pain
  • cell cycle arrest
  • label free