» Articles » PMID: 19704977

High-throughput Design of Microfluidics Based on Directed Bacterial Motility

Overview
Journal Lab Chip
Specialties Biotechnology
Chemistry
Date 2009 Aug 26
PMID 19704977
Citations 14
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Use of motile cells as sensors and actuators in microfabricated devices requires precise design of interfaces between living and non-living components, a process that has relied on slow revision of device architectures as prototypes are sequentially evaluated and re-designed. In this report, we describe a microdesign and fabrication approach capable of iteratively refining three-dimensional bacterial interfaces in periods as short as 10 minutes, and demonstrate its use to drive fluid transport by harnessing flagellar motion. In this approach, multiphoton excitation is used to promote protein photocrosslinking in a direct-write procedure mediated by static and dynamic masking, with the resultant microstructures serving to capture motile bacteria from the surrounding fluidic environment. Reproducible steering and patterning of flagellated E. coli cells drive microfluidic currents capable of guiding micro-objects on predictable trajectories with velocities reaching 150 microm s(-1) and achieving bulk flow through microchannels. We show that bacteria can be dynamically immobilized at specified positions, an approach that frees such devices from limitations imposed by the functional lifetime of cells. These results provide a foundation for the development of sophisticated microfluidic devices powered by cells.

Citing Articles

3D Printing at Micro-Level: Laser-Induced Forward Transfer and Two-Photon Polymerization.

Mahmood M, Popescu A Polymers (Basel). 2021; 13(13).

PMID: 34206309 PMC: 8271989. DOI: 10.3390/polym13132034.


Patterns of bacterial motility in microfluidics-confining environments.

Tokarova V, Perumal A, Nayak M, Shum H, Kaspar O, Rajendran K Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021; 118(17).

PMID: 33875583 PMC: 8092623. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2013925118.


Digital Manufacturing for Microfluidics.

Naderi A, Bhattacharjee N, Folch A Annu Rev Biomed Eng. 2019; 21:325-364.

PMID: 31167099 PMC: 7679200. DOI: 10.1146/annurev-bioeng-092618-020341.


Active micromachines: Microfluidics powered by mesoscale turbulence.

Thampi S, Doostmohammadi A, Shendruk T, Golestanian R, Yeomans J Sci Adv. 2016; 2(7):e1501854.

PMID: 27419229 PMC: 4942321. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1501854.


3D-printing of transparent bio-microfluidic devices in PEG-DA.

Urrios A, Parra-Cabrera C, Bhattacharjee N, Gonzalez-Suarez A, Rigat-Brugarolas L, Nallapatti U Lab Chip. 2016; 16(12):2287-94.

PMID: 27217203 PMC: 4930360. DOI: 10.1039/c6lc00153j.