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Nanotopography as a trigger for the microscale, autogenous and passive lysis of erythrocytes

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:04 authored by Vy Pham, Vi Truong, David Mainwaring, Yachong Guo, Vladimir Baulin, Mohammad Al Kobaisi, Gediminas Gervinskas, Saulius Juodkazis, Wendy Zeng, Pauline Doran, Russell CrawfordRussell Crawford, Elena IvanovaElena Ivanova
Microscale devices are increasingly being developed for diagnostic analysis although conventional lysis as an initial step presents limitations due to its scale or complexity. Here, we detail the physical response of erythrocytes to the surface nanoarchitecture of black Si (bSi) and foreshadow their potential in microanalysis. The physical interaction brought about by the spatial convergence of the two topologies: (a) the nanopillar array present on the bSi and (b) the erythrocyte cytoskeleton present on the red blood cells (RBCs), provides spontaneous stress-induced cell deformation, rupture and passive lysis within an elapsed time of ∼3 min from immobilisation to rupture and without external chemical or mechanical intervention. The mechano-responsive bSi surface provides highly active yet autogenous RBC lysis and a prospect as a front-end platform technology in evolving micro-fluidic platforms for cellular analyses.

History

Journal

Journal of Materials Chemistry B

Volume

2

Issue

19

Start page

2819

End page

2826

Total pages

8

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 the Partner Organisations.

Former Identifier

2006066623

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-09-19