Droplet microfluidics provides a high-throughput platform for screening subjects and conditions involved in biology. Droplets with encapsulated beads and cells have been increasingly used for studying molecular and cellular biology. Droplet sorting is needed to isolate and analyze the subject of interest during such screening. The vast majority of current sorting techniques use fluorescence intensity emitted by each droplet as the only criterion. However, due to the randomness and imperfections in the encapsulation process, typically a mixed population of droplets with an uneven number of encapsulated particles results and is used for screening. Thus droplet sorting based on the number of encapsulated particles becomes necessary for isolating or enriching droplets with a specific occupancy. In this work, we developed a fluorescence-activated microfluidic droplet sorter that integrated a simple deflection mechanism based on the use of a solenoid valve and a sophisticated signal processing system with a microcontroller as the core. By passing droplets through a narrow interrogation channel, the encapsulated particles were detected individually. The microcontroller conducted the computation to determine the number of encapsulated particles in each droplet and made the sorting decision accordingly that led to actuation of the solenoid valve. We tested both fluorescent beads and stained cells and our results showed high efficiency and accuracy for sorting and enrichment.
The manipulation of cells inside water-in-oil droplets is essential for high-throughput screening of cell-based assays using droplet microfluidics. Cell transfection inside droplets is a critical step involved in functional genomics studies that examine in situ functions of genes using the droplet platform. Conventional water-in-hydrocarbon oil droplets are not compatible with chemical transfection due to its damage to cell viability and extraction of organic transfection reagents from the aqueous phase. In this work, we studied chemical transfection of cells encapsulated in picoliter droplets in fluorocarbon oil. The use of fluorocarbon oil permitted high cell viability and little loss of the transfection reagent into the oil phase. We varied the incubation time inside droplets, the DNA concentration, and the droplet size. After optimization, we were able to achieve similar transfection efficiency in droplets to that in the bulk solution. Interestingly, the transfection efficiency increased with smaller droplets, suggesting effects from either the microscale confinement or the surface-to-volume ratio.
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