Device for high throughput single-cell studies
11872559 ยท 2024-01-16
Assignee
Inventors
- BART DEPLANCKE (CUGY, CH)
- Johannes Bues (Lausanne, CH)
- Riccardo Dainese (Bussigny-Lausanne, CH)
- Marjan Biocanin (Lausanne, CH)
Cpc classification
C12Q2563/159
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01L3/502753
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502738
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502784
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2400/0481
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C12Q1/6806
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01L3/502715
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C12Q2563/159
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Q1/6806
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B01L3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C12Q1/6806
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The present invention concerns a microfluidic device or chip including at least one inlet for introducing at least one object into the device; an oil inlet for introducing an oil that supports droplet formation into the device or a droplet forming substance inlet for introducing a droplet forming substance into the device; a co-encapsulation area or structure where the at least one object is encapsulated by the droplet; a microfluidic tubing or channel for transporting the at least one object to an entrance of the co-encapsulation area or structure; an oil supporting droplet formation microchannel or droplet forming substance microchannel connected to the microfluidic tubing or channel to place a liquid of the microfluidic tubing or channel in direct contact with the oil that supports droplet formation or the droplet forming substance; and a droplet microchannel or tubing for transporting the droplet.
Claims
1. A microfluidic device or chip including: a first inlet for introducing a first object into the device and a second inlet for introducing a second object into the device; an oil inlet for introducing an oil that supports droplet formation into the device or a droplet forming substance inlet for introducing a droplet forming substance into the device; a co-encapsulation area or structure where the first and second objects are encapsulated by the droplet, the co-encapsulation area or structure being in fluid communication with the oil inlet or the droplet forming substance inlet; a first microfluidic tubing or channel in fluid communication with the first inlet and with the co-encapsulation area or structure, the first microfluidic tubing or channel being configured to receive the first object from the first inlet and to transport the first object to an entrance of the co-encapsulation area or structure; and a second microfluidic tubing or channel in fluid communication with the second inlet and with the co-encapsulation area or structure, the first microfluidic tubing or channel being configured to receive the second object from the second inlet and to transport the second object to the entrance of the co-encapsulation area or structure; an oil supporting droplet formation microchannel or droplet forming substance microchannel in fluid communication with the oil inlet or the droplet forming substance inlet, and connected to both the first microfluidic tubing or channel and to the second microfluidic tubing or channel to place a liquid of the first and second microfluidic tubings or channels in direct contact with the oil that supports droplet formation or the droplet forming substance; the oil supporting droplet formation microchannel or the droplet forming substance microchannel including the co-encapsulation area or structure; a droplet microchannel or tubing for transporting the droplet for collection, the droplet microchannel or tubing being in fluid communication with the oil supporting droplet formation microchannel or droplet forming substance microchannel; wherein the microfluidic device or chip further includes: a first object stopping valve connected to the first microfluidic tubing or channel and located upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure, the first object stopping valve being configured to stop the first object and position the first object in a stop position or stop region located upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure; and a second object stopping valve connected to the second microfluidic tubing or channel and located upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure, the second object stopping valve being configured to stop the second object and position the second object in a stop position or stop region located upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure; and an ejection valve connected to both the first microfluidic tubing or channel and the second microfluidic tubing or channel, the ejection valve being configured to simultaneous dispense liquid of the first microfluidic tubing or channel and liquid of the second microfluidic tubing or channel to displace both the first and second objects simultaneously to the co-encapsulation area or structure for encapsulation of both the first and second objects inside the same droplet.
2. The microfluidic device or chip according to claim 1, wherein the first and second microfluidic tubings or channels are configured to transport a liquid in first and second microfluidic tubings or channels at the same velocity.
3. A system including the microfluidic device or chip according to claim 1.
4. The system according to claim 3, further including a camera configured to image the at least one object.
5. The system according to claim 3, further including a processor configured to operate a camera and capture images.
6. The system according to claim 5, wherein the processor is further configured to detect movement of the first or second object.
7. The system according to claim 5, wherein the processor is configured to determine from the images when each of the first and second objects reaches their respective stop positions or regions, and further configured to trigger a closure of the first and second object stopping valves when it is determined from the images that each of the first and second objects reaches their respective stop positions or regions.
8. The system according to claim 7, wherein the processor is configured to optically inspect the first and second objects in the stop positions or regions, and to proceed with co-encapsulation of the first and second objects.
9. The system according to claim 8, wherein the processor is configured to close a waste valve and open a collection valve.
10. The microfluidic device or chip according to claim 1, wherein the ejection valve is configured to displace, when actuated, liquid in the first and second microfluidic tubing or channels and simultaneously displace the first and second objects to a co-encapsulation point at the exact same time to thereby encapsulate the first and second object in the same droplet.
11. The microfluidic device or chip according to claim 10, wherein the microfluidic device or chip includes a processor configured to actuate the ejection valve.
12. The microfluidic device according to claim 11, wherein the ejection valve is a T-valve.
13. The system according to claim 9, wherein the system is configured to actuate the first stopping valve and the second stopping valve in an oscillatory manner to displace the first or second object an incremental distance.
14. The system according to claim 13, further including pressure sources connected to the first and second object stopping valves.
15. The system according to claim 3, wherein the at least one object is a particle.
16. A method for operating a system according to claim 4 for forming a droplet comprising at least one object, the method including the steps of: introducing a first and second object into the device through a first and second inlet; introducing a droplet forming substance into the device through the droplet forming substance inlet; transporting the first object through first microfluidic tubing or channel and the second object through second microfluidic tubing or channel; stopping a first object inside the first and microfluidic tubing or channel upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure using a first object stopping valve connected to the first microfluidic tubing or channel and located upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure; and stopping a second object upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure using a second object stopping valve connected to the second microfluidic tubing or channel and located upstream of the co-encapsulation area or structure; simultaneously displacing both the first object in the first microfluidic tubing or channel and the second object in the second microfluidic tubing or channel to the co-encapsulation point at the same time to encapsulate the first and second object in the same droplet using an ejection valve connected to both the first microfluidic tubing or channel and the second microfluidic tubing or channel, the ejection valve being configured to simultaneous dispense liquid of both the first microfluidic tubing or channel and the second microfluidic tubing or channel to permit the first and second objects to simultaneously move to the co-encapsulation point for encapsulation by the same droplet.
17. A droplet containing the first and second objects produced according to the method of claim 16.
18. The system according to claim 3, wherein the system is configured to carry out oscillatory actuation of the first and second object stopping valves to open and close the first and second object stopping valves to move the first and/or second objects towards their respective stop positions or stop regions.
19. The method according to claim 16, wherein oscillatory actuation of the first and second object stopping valves is carried out to open and close the first and second object stopping valves to move the first and second objects towards their respective stop positions or stop regions; the ejection valve is actioned to simultaneous dispense liquid of the first microfluidic tubing or channel and liquid of the second microfluidic tubing or channel to simultaneously displace the first and second objects to the co-encapsulation area or structure, and encapsulating the first and second objects inside the same droplet by flowing the droplet forming substance through the droplet forming substance inlet and in the droplet microchannel or tubing to shear the droplet.
Description
A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The above object, features and other advantages of the present invention will be best understood from the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19) Herein, identical reference numerals are used, where possible, to designate identical elements that are common to the Figures.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SEVERAL EMBODIMENTS
(20) The present invention concerns a device or microrobotic system comprising for example microfluidics, droplet microfluidics, and real-time image processing. A set of micromechanical valves for microparticle position with accuracy can be included. The system may be configured for the automation of image processing and on-chip microfluidic operation. The system may also be configured to implements a machine learning model for the automated calibration and operation of the device.
(21) The present invention relates to the on-chip integration of multilayer microfluidics and droplet microfluidics. A system can be configured to carry out real-time image processing and/or machine learning. One object of the invention is to monitor and manipulate with accuracy the position of single microparticles (including single cells) in a microfluidic chip. This platform can for example deterministically co-encapsulate an arbitrary amount of single microparticles in an arbitrary amount of single water-in-oil droplets. The platform can for example be used to study lowly abundant cell populations with single-cell accuracy and with infinitesimal sample loss.
(22) The microfluidic device or chip may include at least one inlet for introducing at least one object into the device and an oil inlet for introducing an oil that supports droplet formation into the device. The device may additionally include a co-encapsulation area or structure where the at least one object is encapsulated by the droplet, a microfluidic tubing or channel for transporting the at least one object to an entrance of the co-encapsulation area or structure.
(23) The device may additionally include an oil supporting droplet formation microchannel connected to the microfluidic tubing or channel to place a liquid of the microfluidic tubing or channel in direct contact with the oil that supports droplet formation and a droplet microchannel or tubing for transporting the droplet.
(24) The device or chip may include a single microfluidic tubing or channel for transporting the object, or two or multiple microfluidic tubings or channels.
(25) Chip Fabrication
(26) The microfluidic devices are fabricated by standard multilayer soft lithography techniques; more in detail, the device are conceived and designed by using the CAD software L-EDIT (Tanner, Mentor Graphics). Once designed the devices layout features are first imprinted on chromium masks and then transferred on 4-inches silicon wafers. For the wafers containing the features of the flow layer an exemplary 50 um-thick (or 60 microns thick) positive photoresist (AZ40XT, MicroChemicals GmbH) is used, while for the control layer, 50 um-thick negative photoresist (SU8 3050, Microchem) is used. After development, the flow layer wafer is reflown at 120 degrees Celsius for approximately 60 seconds to round the features. Once fabricated, the wafer molds are passivated by a 1% v/v water-based solution of trichloro(1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorooctyl)silane (Sigma-Aldrich).
(27) In order to fabricate the actual microfluidic device, two PDMS-based (SYLGARD 184) solutions are used; for the control layer, a 20:1 w/w PDMS/curing agent solution is spun on the control layer mold in order to achieve a thickness of 80-100 um. For the flow layer, a 5:1 w/w PDMS/curing agent solution is poured directly onto the wafer in order to achieve a thickness of 0.4-0.6 cm. The two layers are partially cured at 80 degrees Celsius for 30 min, after which the flow layer is peeled off the wafer and aligned to the control layer. The two layer are left at 80 degrees Celsius for >1.5 hours in order to consolidate the bond. Subsequently the microfluidic devices are peeled off the second wafer and inlet holes are punched using a manual-punching machine (Syneo, USA). Finally, the so-obtained devices are bonded to a glass slide using oxygen plasma at 450 mTorr for 45 seconds exposure time. Before the experiment, in order to make the inner surface of the microfluidic channels hydrophobic and thus compatible with water-in-oil droplet formation, all the devices are treated with a 2% v/v water-based solution of trichloro(1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorooctyl)silane.
(28) Electronic Components Setup for Microfluidic Pressure Control
(29) Once fabricated and treated with silane, the microfluidic devices are connected through the punched holes to water-filled microfluidic tubing (Tygon tubing). In order to control the pressure in the tubing in a fast and controllable way, we connected all tubings to solenoid valves (Festo). In turn, the solenoid valve actuation is controlled by a ETHERNET Programmable Fieldbus Controller (WAGO). The controller is connected through an Ethernet cable to a regular Windows desktop and it's programmed by our custom C++ software using the open source libmodbus library. For controlling particle speeds and precision pressure control a Fluigent FlowEZ flow controller is used, and controlled using C++ with the Fluigent SDK.
(30) Real-Time Image Processing
(31) On-chip real-time images were acquired through a HotShot cc camera (nac Image Technology) mounted on a Nikon TS100 inverted microscope. Images were loaded and analyzed using OpenCV functions included in the same C++ software as above. For faster image acquisition (around 400 fps) a Ximea xiC MC031MG-SY camera was used.
(32) On-Chip Droplet Formation and Microparticle Encapsulation
(33) Droplets are formed by flow-focusing any water-based solution with fluorinated oil (Droplet Generation Oil, Bio-Rad). As the microparticle-containing water phase a 80% v/v PBS solution is used. In principle, any microparticle sufficiently big to be visible at the microscope and small enough to fit in the microfluidic channels (i.e. particles in the range 5-40 m in diameter for example, or in the range 5-50 m for example) can be used. In the calibration phase, either Hela-S3 cells or polystyrene particles of 18.0-24.9 m in diameter (Spherotech) can be used.
(34) Operation of the Microfluidic Chip.
(35) In the first and simplest instance of the invention the microfluidic chip was designed in order for it to contain the minimum number of elements (channels, resistors, microvalves, etc.) required for deterministic co-encapsulation of two cells/microparticles in the same water-in-oil droplet.
(36) The design is shown in
Design of the Custom Imaging Software.
I. Particle Placement by Model Fitting
(37) The custom imaging software was written in the programming language C++.
(38) The essential image processing performed by the software is shown in
(39) The parameters of the model are updated in real-time during an experiment. The update rule is set to minimize the distance between the position where the bead/cell stops and the optimal stopping point position.
(40) This process of image processing and model fitting is reiterated throughout an experiment. This is what allows the setup to acquire micrometer level accuracy in the microparticle positioning task and to become robust to unavoidable inter- and intra-experimental variations like manual system setup, differences in solution preparation etc.
(41) As the name suggests, the fundamental property of DISCO is the ability of control bead/cell droplet co-encapsulation in a deterministic way. For this to happen beads and cells have to be positioned with micrometer accuracy. More precisely, beads/cells have to be placed in a position (or range), which ensures that during droplet formation they are encapsulated by the same droplet. In
(42) Deterministic Particle Placement and Encapsulation on Microfluidics Chips
(43) The developed particle coordination system is a combination of machine vision and multilayer microfluidics to autonomous control movements and positions of particles on microfluidic chips. The system utilizes a brightfield microscope attached to a camera to stream images in real-time to a computer. The computer is analyzing the images and actuating flow control lines and solenoid valves, to control movements on chip. The overall information flow is summarized in
(44) I. Particle Detection by Machine Vision
(45) To precisely place and move particles on a microfluidics chip, a machine-vision approach was employed to detect moving spheres on a microfluidics chip. The approach relies on identification of moving shapes between subsequent images by image subtraction, thresholding of the compound image, and contour detection on the resulting binary image. A visual representation of the particle detection approach is depicted in
(46) In detail, the steps of detections are the following: 1. An input microscopy image is reduced (by cropping) to regions of interests (ROIs). 2. Cropped images are blurred by a Gaussian filter to remove single pixel artifacts. 3. Subsequent images from the same ROI are subtracted from each other to an absolute value. Of note, we also considering images subsequent that have multiple images in-between one another, currently we use a buffer of 7 images. 4. After the subtraction, the compound image is thresholded to a binary image. Thresholds employed in this step depend on the opacity of the particle to be detected. 5. Contour detection is applied to the binary image. 6. Finally, contours are pre-evaluated by their pixel area, and contours reaching a defined threshold are further analyzed for their circularity by calculating the ratio of perimeter to area. This strategy is tailored to detection of round particles in brightfield microscopy and can be easily adapted to alternative scenarios.
(47) This simplistic approach for particle recognition on microfluidic chips is coded in C++ and the OpenCV computer vision library. The current multithreaded implementation of this code is able to real-time process 400 frames per second, and each frame is processed within a few milliseconds causing very little delay. The performance and reliability was tested on 40 um microspheres flowing in microfluidic channels and the code showed robust performance over a wide range of particle speeds, detecting over 98% of all particles flowing in the channel, as shown in
(48) II. Particle Placement by Valve Oscillation
(49) Particles movements are coordinated by firstly detecting them using the previously described machine vision approach, and subsequent microfluidic valve closure. As peristaltic microfluidic valves are displacing liquids inside a microfluidics channel, precise placement by mere valve closure is impractical. For this reason, in this approach, we detect moving particles in a dedicated detection region on the chip, displayed in
(50) III. Droplet On-Demand Production
(51) For processing of particles, or assembly of spatially segregated compartments, particles are placed inside water-in-oil microdroplets. The channel arrangement for producing droplets contains the sample holding channel, and an additional channel joining the sample channel containing fluorinated oil. As after particle stopping the aqueous phase is not moving, an additional valve, the T-valve was placed behind the particle stopping valve to displace liquid in the sample channel. Channel arrangements are shown in
(52) To demonstrate the flexible formation of monodisperse droplets from stopped flows, a flow-controller was connected to the T-valve, and varying pressures applied to the sample channel. It was possible to produce droplets of a wide range of sizes in a highly reproducible manner, shown in
(53) Deterministic Co-Encapsulation Chip
(54) Using the particle coordination and encapsulation workflow a DeterminIStic CO-encaspulation robot was developed. The overall chip layout, shown in
(55) For setting up a microfluidic chip solenoid valve lines are connected to all valves (
(56) The processing workflow is described below.
(57) The improvement form stochastic co-encapsulation, shown in
(58) A novel approach for particle coordination is disclosed by combining machine vision and multilayer microfluidics into a particle processing robot. The approach relies on a simplistic particle detection approach, here demonstrated to be compatible with cells and microbeads, yet generally applicable to particles detectable by microscopy. The approach, besides being highly reliable in detecting particles, is due to its simplicity also compatible with high-speed imaging. Here a parallelized version of the code is used at 400 frames per second in real-time. In combination with oscillatory valve actuation, it enables highly precise particle movement and placement on microfluidic chips. In contrast to currently employed methods for particle processing, our method uniquely allows for particle stopping without traps, and automated controlled particle movement on chip. Employing a new droplet on demand approach using dynamic pressurization of a peristaltic microfluidic valve, the particle manipulation system shows to be compatible with microdroplets.
(59) In a first application, a DeterminIStic CO-encapsulation (DISCO) system was developed, based on the process and design schemes for particle manipulation. Specifically, two particles (microbeads and cells are shown) are detected, stopped at a defined position, and encapsulated in a droplet. Using the particle coordination approach it was possible to develop an autonomous robot to undertake this task which vastly improves co-encapsulation (75-90%) efficiencies of particles, and has a close to perfect co-encapsulation success rate. As cutting edge single-cell processing methods, for e.g. RNA sequencing (Macosko et al. 2015), rely on co-encapsulation of RNA capturing particles with cells, the uniquely high efficiency and reliability of DISCO will allow for processing for rare-samples, e.g. circulating tumor cells.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
(60) Macosko, E. Z., Basu, A., Satija, R., Nemesh, J., Shekhar, K., Goldman, M., et al. (2015). Highly Parallel Genome-wide Expression Profiling of Individual Cells Using Nanoliter Droplets. Cell, 161(5), 1202-1214. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2015.05.002 Dura, B., Dougan, S. K., Barisa, M., Hoehl, M. M., Lo, C. T., Ploegh, H. L., & Voldman, J. (2015). Profiling lymphocyte interactions at the single-cell level by microfluidic cell pairing. Nature Communications, 6, 5940. doi:10.1038/ncomms6940