• Sweeping Cells Apart for use in Medical Research

News & Views

Sweeping Cells Apart for use in Medical Research

Researchers at the University of Glasgow have developed a new method to separate cells, which could lead to more efficient medical research. The new process, which the researchers have named ‘Dynamic acoustic field activated cell separation’ or DAFACS, has been found to recover up to 100% of useful cells from samples.

DAFACS uses moving acoustic waves which can be tuned to separate cells of different sizes from each other, allowing large cells to be easily swept free of smaller ones, or debris.

The research was led by Dr Anne Bernassau of the University of Glasgow’s School of Engineering and Dr Mathis Riehle of the Institute of Molecular, Cell and Systems Biology and is outlined in a new paper.*

Dr Bernassau said: “The process gives us very fine control over the particles we’re working with. The cells are held by acoustic waves, and we can then pick out the useful cells by moving the waves that hold the cells. The entire system cost us a few thousand pounds, which is considerably less than the tens of thousands needed for the most affordable cell sorting systems currently available. It can also be easily scaled up to allow many more cells to be separated than we have done in the lab so far.

”Dr Riehle added: “Our method allows for a very gentle separation because we apply exceedingly small forces - the soundwaves we use are of similar strength to the ones applied in medical ultrasound imaging. This process of very gently massaging the cells apart with acoustic waves leaves them in excellent condition for medical research.

“We tune the acoustic waves so that small cells and debris are left behind, while the much larger nerve cells we work with drift along with the moving waves. Watching the process at work through a microscope, you can see how the nerve cells are swept gently past the debris, which is held firmly in place.”

The paper, titled ‘Dynamic acoustic field activated cell separation (DAFACS)’, is published in Lab on a Chip and is available online at ow.ly/FBN4o


Digital Edition

LMUK 49.7 Nov 2024

November 2024

News - Research & Events News   - News & Views Articles - They’re burning the labs... Spotlight Features - Incubators, Freezers & Cooling Equipment - Pumps, Valves & Liquid Hand...

View all digital editions

Events

analytica China

Nov 18 2024 Shanghai, China

Pharma Asia

Nov 20 2024 Karachi, Pakistan

Turkchem

Nov 27 2024 Istanbul, Turkey

Smart Factory Expo 2025

Jan 22 2025 Tokyo, Japan

Instrumentation Live

Jan 22 2025 Birmingham, UK

View all events