MethodsX (Jan 2020)

A Microfluidic Device for Imaging Samples from Microbial Suspension Cultures

  • Alexander Letourneau,
  • Jack Kegel,
  • Jehad Al-Ramahi,
  • Emily Yachinich,
  • Harris B. Krause,
  • Cameron J. Stewart,
  • Megan N. McClean

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
p. 100891

Abstract

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Traditional methods to assess microbial cells during suspension culture require laborious and frequent manual sampling. Approaches to automate sampling and assessment utilize dedicated, sophisticated equipment and suffer from a lack of temporal resolution and sampling efficiency. In this study we describe a simple microfluidic device that allows microbial cells to be sampled from suspension culture and rapidly slowed and concentrated for single-cell imaging on a standard laboratory microscope. We demonstrate a device that: • slows and concentrates microbial cells, specifically budding yeast, sampled from suspension culture and improves imaging of individual cells by concentrating them in a single focal plane • provides imaging quality and temporal resolution that is capable of monitoring dynamic spatiotemporal processes, such as nuclear localization of a protein • is inexpensive and simple enough to be fabricated and used in laboratories equipped for standard molecular and cellular biology

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