Tim L. Czech , Philipp P. Nelson , Clemens Thölken , Patrick Meyer , Timo Hess , Ho-Ryun Chung , Till Adhikary
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引用次数: 0
摘要
单细胞技术的出现导致生物科学领域对微流体技术的需求不断增长。商业平台仍然是昂贵、不灵活和不可定制的黑盒子。我们开发了一种开源、多通道、零回流微流体设备,它基于由 Raspberry Pi 计算机控制的注射泵。它既使用了现成的 3D 打印部件,也使用了定制的印刷电路板,而且易于维修。此外,它还可根据各种应用进行完全定制。总成本不到 600 欧元。我们为其中一个通道配备了定制的珀尔帖(Peltier)温度控制器,用于精确加热或冷却,还配备了一个混合器装置,防止细胞在注射器内沉淀。根据样品中细胞的不同,加热和冷却可分别用于维持有益的环境或减缓细胞过程和细胞死亡。该装置与微流控耗材和显微镜相结合,能够集成到基于液滴的高质量单细胞 RNA 测序工作流程中,如图所示。对人类和昆虫细胞混合物的分析产生了一个包含 17,769 个单细胞的数据集,展示了可靠的操作和分离。
Pi-seq—A customizable multichannel syringe pump for microfluidics
The advent of single cell technologies resulted in growing demand for microfluidics in the biological sciences. Commercial platforms have remained expensive, inflexible, and non-customizable black boxes. We developed an open source, multichannel, zero-backflow microfluidics device based on syringe pumps controlled by a Raspberry Pi computer. It uses both readily available and 3D-printed parts as well as a custom PCB and is easily serviceable. Moreover, it is fully customizable for various applications. Total cost is under €600. We equipped one channel with a custom Peltier-based temperature controller for precise heating or cooling and a mixer mechanism to prevent sedimentation of the cells within the syringe. Depending on the cells in the sample, heating and cooling can be useful to maintain a beneficial environment or to slow down cellular processes and cell death, respectively. Combined with microfluidics consumables and a microscope, the device is capable of integration into a high quality droplet-based single cell RNA sequencing workflow as shown here. Analysis of a mixture of human and insect cells resulted in a dataset of 17,769 single cells and demonstrates reliable operation and separation.
HardwareXEngineering-Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
18.20%
发文量
124
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍:
HardwareX is an open access journal established to promote free and open source designing, building and customizing of scientific infrastructure (hardware). HardwareX aims to recognize researchers for the time and effort in developing scientific infrastructure while providing end-users with sufficient information to replicate and validate the advances presented. HardwareX is open to input from all scientific, technological and medical disciplines. Scientific infrastructure will be interpreted in the broadest sense. Including hardware modifications to existing infrastructure, sensors and tools that perform measurements and other functions outside of the traditional lab setting (such as wearables, air/water quality sensors, and low cost alternatives to existing tools), and the creation of wholly new tools for either standard or novel laboratory tasks. Authors are encouraged to submit hardware developments that address all aspects of science, not only the final measurement, for example, enhancements in sample preparation and handling, user safety, and quality control. The use of distributed digital manufacturing strategies (e.g. 3-D printing) is encouraged. All designs must be submitted under an open hardware license.