Utilization of Cell-Sized Lipid Containers for Nanostructure and Macromolecule Handling in Microfabricated Devices
- 29 March 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 77 (9) , 2795-2801
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac048207o
Abstract
We propose an original approach to handle submicrometer-sized biological or inorganic materials in microfabricated devices for micro total analysis applications. Cell-sized liposomes were utilized as containers for nanoparticles, green fluorescent proteins, or DNA and handled within a microfluidic chip. Due to the micrometer size of these liposomes, their detection could be achieved by conventional optical systems. Moreover, liposomes are hardly sensitive to Brownian motion; their trapping or transportation is thereby made easy with electrostatic-based techniques, for instance, developed the past few years for cells and particles. Encapsulated materials were confined for long durations with respect to the diffusive scale time, and the liposome membrane provided excellent protection from the outside environment, inhibiting undesirable interactions. A microfluidic device consisting of a flow cell covering an array of asymmetric electrodes allowed us to convey readily liposomes by the AC electroosmosis effect. We also assessed the electrofusion of liposomes between micromachined electrodes, opening up controlled initiation of reaction inside these containers; it was exemplified by fusing differently colored liposomes. We observed that a large fraction of the liposomes fused for electric field intensity around 6 kV/cm. Applications ranging from ultrasmall biomimetic reactors to large-scale drug delivery or cell labeling can be envisaged.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Microfluidic Device for Electrofusion of Biological VesiclesBiomedical Microdevices, 2004
- Micro Total Analysis Systems. Recent DevelopmentsAnalytical Chemistry, 2004
- Gene Expression within Cell‐Sized Lipid VesiclesChemBioChem, 2003
- The 'right' size in nanobiotechnologyNature Biotechnology, 2003
- Optical Manipulation and Fusion of Liposomes as MicroreactorsLangmuir, 2003
- DNA Manipulation and Retrieval from an Aqueous Solution with Micromachined NanotweezersAnalytical Chemistry, 2003
- Microfluidic Large-Scale IntegrationScience, 2002
- Towards ideal NO/sub x/ control technology using a plasma-chemical hybrid processIEEE Transactions on Industry Applications, 2001
- Nonequilibrium Self-Assembly of Long Chains of Polar Molecules in Superfluid HeliumScience, 1999
- Dielectrophoretic trapping of single sub-micrometre scale bioparticlesJournal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 1998