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Microfluidic EmbryoSort Technology - Towards in flow analysis, sorting and dispensing of individual vertebrate embryos

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 18:06 authored by Nurul Hajar Mohd Fuad, Donald WlodkowicDonald Wlodkowic
The demand to reduce the numbers of laboratory animals has facilitated the emergence of surrogate models such as tests performed on zebrafish (Danio rerio) or African clawed frog's (Xenopus levis) eggs, embryos and larvae. Those two model organisms are becoming increasingly popular replacements to current adult animal testing in toxicology, ecotoxicology and also in drug discovery. Zebrafish eggs and embryos are particularly attractive for toxicological analysis due their size (diameter 1.6 mm), optical transparency, large numbers generated per fish and very straightforward husbandry. The current bottleneck in using zebrafish embryos for screening purposes is, however, a tedious manual evaluation to confirm the fertilization status and subsequent dispensing of single developing embryos to multitier plates to perform toxicity analysis. Manual procedures associated with sorting hundreds of embryos are very monotonous and as such prone to significant analytical errors due to operator's fatigue. In this work, we present a proofof- concept design of a continuous flow embryo sorter capable of analyzing, sorting and dispensing objects ranging in size from 1.5 - 2.5 mm. The prototypes were fabricated in polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) transparent thermoplastic using infrared laser micromachining. The application of additive manufacturing processes to prototype Lab-on-a-Chip sorters using both fused deposition manufacturing (FDM) and stereolithography (SLA) were also explored. The operation of the device was based on a revolving receptacle capable of receiving, holding and positioning single fish embryos for both interrogation and subsequent sorting. The actuation of the revolving receptacle was performed using a DC motor and/or microservo motor. The system was designed to separate between fertilized (LIVE) and non-fertilized (DEAD) eggs, based on optical transparency using infrared (IR) emitters and receivers.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1117/12.2033406
  2. 2.
    ISBN - Is published in 9780819498144 (urn:isbn:9780819498144)

Start page

892347-1

End page

892347-6

Total pages

6

Outlet

Proceedings of SPIE 8923, Micro/Nano Materials, Devices, and Systems

Editors

James Friend, H. Hoe Tan

Name of conference

SPIE 8923, Micro/Nano Materials, Devices, and Systems, 892347

Publisher

S P I E - International Society for Optical Engineering

Place published

United States

Start date

2013-12-09

End date

2013-12-11

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 SPIE

Former Identifier

2006049809

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-21

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