Soft lithography is an alternative to silicon-based micromachining that uses replica molding of nontraditional elastomeric materials to fabricate stamps and microfluidic channels. We describe here an extension to the soft lithography paradigm, multilayer soft lithography, with which devices consisting of multiple layers may be fabricated from soft materials. We used this technique to build active microfluidic systems containing on-off valves, switching valves, and pumps entirely out of elastomer. The softness of these materials allows the device areas to be reduced by more than two orders of magnitude compared with silicon-based devices. The other advantages of soft lithography, such as rapid prototyping, ease of fabrication, and biocompatibility, are retained.
Microfabricated integrated circuits revolutionized computation by vastly reducing the space, labor, and time required for calculations. Microfluidic systems hold similar promise for the large-scale automation of chemistry and biology, suggesting the possibility of numerous experiments performed rapidly and in parallel, while consuming little reagent. While it is too early to tell whether such a vision will be realized, significant progress has been achieved, and various applications of significant scientific and practical interest have been developed. Here a review of the physics of small volumes ͑nanoliters͒ of fluids is presented, as parametrized by a series of dimensionless numbers expressing the relative importance of various physical phenomena. Specifically, this review explores the Reynolds number Re, addressing inertial effects; the Péclet number Pe, which concerns convective and diffusive transport; the capillary number Ca expressing the importance of interfacial tension; the Deborah, Weissenberg, and elasticity numbers De, Wi, and El, describing elastic effects due to deformable microstructural elements like polymers; the Grashof and Rayleigh numbers Gr and Ra, describing density-driven flows; and the Knudsen number, describing the importance of noncontinuum molecular effects. Furthermore, the long-range nature of viscous flows and the small device dimensions inherent in microfluidics mean that the influence of boundaries is typically significant. A variety of strategies have been developed to manipulate fluids by exploiting boundary effects; among these are electrokinetic effects, acoustic streaming, and fluid-structure interactions. The goal is to describe the physics behind the rich variety of fluid phenomena occurring on the nanoliter scale using simple scaling arguments, with the hopes of developing an intuitive sense for this occasionally counterintuitive world. CONTENTS
Metabolism of oxygen, while central to life, also produces reactive oxygen species (ROS) that have been implicated in processes as diverse as cancer, cardiovascular disease, and aging. It has recently been shown that central nervous system stem cells 1, 2 and hematopoietic stem cells and early progenitors [3][4][5][6] contain lower levels of ROS than their more mature progeny and that these differences appear to be critical for maintaining stem cell function. We hypothesized that epithelial tissue stem cells and their cancer stem cell (CSC) counterparts may also share this property. Here we show that normal mammary epithelial stem cells contain lower concentrations of ROS than their more mature # To whom correspondence should be addressed. mfclarke@stanford.edu. * Contributed equally.Author Contributions M.D. and R.W.C. contributed equally to this work. M.D, R.W.C., N.L., T.K., M.J.D., A.K., D.Q., J.S.L., L.A., and M.W. performed the experiments. B.J., M.J.K, I.W., F.W., G.S., C.G., B.P., J.S., and S.K.L. aided in human tumor tissue acquisition. G.S. designed a pre-operative protocol allowing for tissue acquisition. M.D., R.W.C., and M.F.C. designed the experiments and wrote the manuscript. S.R.Q., J.M.B., and I.L.W. provided intellectual input and aided in experimental design.Author Information Reprints and permissions information is available at npg.nature.com/reprintsandpermissions. Given the conservation of low ROS levels in several types of normal tissue stem cells, we hypothesized that CSCs in some tumors may also contain lower concentrations of ROS than their non-tumorigenic progeny. In order to investigate ROS biology in human CSCs, we began by examining the expression of genes involved in ROS metabolism in primary human breast CSCs and NTCs. Using microarray data from human breast CSC-enriched populations and NTCs 13 and a curated list of genes involved in ROS metabolism 5 (see methods), Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) 14 revealed that the expression of ROS genes was highly overrepresented in the CD44 + CD24 -/low Lin -breast CSC-enriched population compared to NTCs (p<0.001; Supplementary Fig. S2). The ROS genes identified as the core enriched genes by GSEA included a number of important antioxidant genes (Supplementary Table 2). Thus, gene expression profiles of human breast CSC-containing populations suggest that they contain higher levels of antioxidant defense systems than NTCs. NIH Public AccessNext, we directly assessed ROS levels in human tumor subpopulations. To do this the CD44 + CD24 -/low Lin -breast CSC-enriched population and the corresponding "Not CD44 + CD24 -/low " Lin -NTC population were purified from surgically resected breast tumors ( Supplementary Fig. S3). DCF-DA staining revealed that the CSC-enriched population in the human breast tumors we examined contained significantly lower levels of prooxidants than the NTC population. In some breast tumors, the vast majority of cells in the CSC-containing fraction displayed a low ROS phenotype compared to NTCs (Fig. 1e) while ...
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