Micromachines (Feb 2025)

Dielectrophoretic Microfluidic Designs for Precision Cell Enrichments and Highly Viable Label-Free Bacteria Recovery from Blood

  • Dean E. Thomas,
  • Kyle S. Kinskie,
  • Kyle M. Brown,
  • Lisa A. Flanagan,
  • Rafael V. Davalos,
  • Alexandra R. Hyler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/mi16020236
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 2
p. 236

Abstract

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Conducting detailed cellular analysis of complex biological samples poses challenges in cell sorting and recovery for downstream analysis. Label-free microfluidics provide a promising solution for these complex applications. In this work, we investigate particle manipulation on two label-free microdevice designs using cDEP to enrich E. coli from whole human blood to mimic infection workflows. E. coli is still a growing source of bacteremia, sepsis, and other infections in modern countries, affecting millions of patients globally. The two microfluidic designs were evaluated for throughput, scaling, precision targeting, and high-viability recovery. While CytoChip D had the potential for higher throughput, given its continuous method of DEP-based sorting to accommodate larger clinical samples like a 10 mL blood draw, it could not effectively recover the bacteria. CytoChip B achieved a high-purity recovery of over 98% of bacteria from whole human blood, even in concentrations on the order of <100 CFU/mL, demonstrating the feasibility of processing and recovering ultra-low concentrations of bacteria for downstream analysis, culture, and drug testing. Future work will aim to scale CytoChip B for larger volume throughput while still achieving high bacteria recovery.

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