PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

High-throughput cell-sorting method can separate 10 billion bacterial cells in 30 minutes

New method could have direct applications for biomedical research and environmental science

High-throughput cell-sorting method can separate 10 billion bacterial cells in 30 minutes
2014-09-26
(Press-News.org) University of Hawaii at Manoa College of Engineering mechanical engineer Yi Zuo has developed a new, high-throughput method for sorting cells capable of separating 10 billion bacterial cells in 30 minutes.

The finding has already proven useful for studying bacterial cells and microalgae, and could one day have direct applications for biomedical research and environmental science—basically any field in which a large quantity of microbial samples need to be processed.

The new method was described in a September 2014 publication in the scientific journal Analytical Chemistry, "Surface free energy activated high-throughput cell sorting."

Almost all of today's previously existing cell-sorting methods rely on what is called a single-cell analysis platform. These methods sort cells by running each individual cell through a kind of gateway that nabs out the ones that embody a single, defined physical property. Such methods can be designed to sort cells by size or to identify cells that display a targeted feature, such as a fluorescent dye that has been added.

Zuo's method is different. It is a bulk method that sorts different cell populations by tuning their solubility.

"It has no apparent limitations in sorting throughput," said Zuo, who came up with the original idea while teaching a UH Manoa graduate level mechanical engineering class, ME650 Surface Phenomena. "We can separate 10 billion bacterial cells within 30 minutes."

The new method relies on a measurement principle that sorts cells by differentiating their characteristic surface free energies.

For liquid surfaces, surface free energy is equal to surface tension. But for solid surfaces, such as the surface of cells, surface free energy cannot be measured directly. Instead, surface free energy for solids was previously estimated using a contact angle measurement with complicated theoretical interpretations.

"Although plausible, this principle was very hard to implement," Zuo said. "Compared to other cell properties, such as size and deformability, it is technically challenging to determine their surface free energy. Only recently we developed a novel spectrophotometric method for directly determining the surface free energy of live cells. Based on this technological advance, we are able to implement the principle of surface free energy-activated cell sorting."

Zuo did this research in collaboration with UH Mānoa civil engineer Tao Yan. Their research was supported in part by Zuo's National Science Foundation CAREER Award in 2013. Under this grant, Zuo is studying the molecular mechanisms of lung surfactant, which is crucial to maintaining normal respiratory function in air sacs of the lung. Zuo hopes to help expand the use of clinical surfactants to treat various neonatal and adult respiratory diseases, including respiratory distress syndrome.

The University of Hawai'i Office of Technology Transfer and Economic Development (OTTED) has filed a provisional U.S. patent application for the new cell-sorting method, "Surface Free Energy Based Particle Sorting."

INFORMATION: CITATION: Zhang X, Zhang Q, Yan T, Jiang Z, Zhang X, Zuo YY, Surface free energy activated high-throughput cell sorting, Anal. Chem. (2014) DOI: 10.1021/ac503100a.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
High-throughput cell-sorting method can separate 10 billion bacterial cells in 30 minutes High-throughput cell-sorting method can separate 10 billion bacterial cells in 30 minutes 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New scientific review of genetically engineered feeds in livestock diets

2014-09-26
An article published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Animal Science concludes feeding livestock diets that contain genetically engineered (GE) crops has no impact on the health or productivity of those animals. In a thorough review of scientific literature and field data sets, the article documents evidence that the performance and health of food-producing animals fed GE crops are comparable with those of animals fed non-GE crops. Since their introduction in 1996, GE feed crops have become an increasing component of livestock diets. Today, more than 95 percent of U.S. ...

Experts call for widening the debate on climate change

2014-09-26
Environmental scientists are being urged to broaden the advice they give on global climate change, say experts who are also frustrated that decision makers are not taking enough action. Writing in the journal Nature Climate Change, The University of Manchester researchers argue that scientists are expressing a strong desire to fix the problems highlighted by their studies into human-induced climate change The authors suggest there are problems with environmental scientists offering practical solutions that can help societies adapt to a fast-changing Earth - one where ...

How plankton gets jet lagged

How plankton gets jet lagged
2014-09-26
A hormone that governs sleep and jet lag in humans may also drive the mass migration of plankton in the ocean, scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, have found. The molecule in question, melatonin, is essential to maintain our daily rhythm, and the European scientists have now discovered that it governs the nightly migration of a plankton species from the surface to deeper waters. The findings, published online today in Cell, indicate that melatonin's role in controlling daily rhythms probably evolved early in the history ...

Green light for clever algae

Green light for clever algae
2014-09-26
The researchers headed by Prof Dr Nicole Frankenberg-Dinkel have been the first ones to reveal similarities and differences in the assembly of the light-harvesting machinery of the cryptophyte Guillardia theta compared to cyanobacteria and red algae. The publication of their results in the current issue of "The Journal of Biological Chemistry" is among the two per cent of the publications that were selected as "Paper of the week". Cryptophytes: Matryoshka dolls of the waters Unlike traditional eukaryotic cells – i.e. all cells with a nucleus – cryptophyte cells resemble ...

Skin pigment renders sun's UV radiation harmless using projectiles

2014-09-26
Researchers at Lund University in Sweden and other institutions have worked out how the pigment of the skin manages to protect the body from the sun's dangerous UV rays. The skin pigment converts the UV radiation into heat through a rapid chemical reaction that shoots protons from the molecules of the pigment. In a new study, the team from Lund University, working with colleagues in France and Italy, have studied pigment in the skin and its building blocks. Pigment in both skin and hair comprises two different types of melanin: eumelanin and pheomelanin. Eumelanin makes ...

Antibacterial resistance a cause for major concern according to world leading cystic fibrosis expert

Antibacterial resistance a cause for major concern according to world leading cystic fibrosis expert
2014-09-26
World leading Cystic Fibrosis experts, from Queen's University Belfast, have called for greater research to address the major concern of antibacterial resistance. Professor Stuart Elborn, an international authority on respiratory medicine, said that more funding and further research are required into antibiotic resistance in order to improve patient outcomes for people with Cystic Fibrosis. In his paper, Infections in chronic lung diseases 2, which was recently published in The Lancet, Professor Elborn reviews current research into infections in chronic lung diseases. ...

'Multi-spectra glasses' for scanning electron microscopy

Multi-spectra glasses for scanning electron microscopy
2014-09-26
This news release is available in German. The scanning electron microscope is not only used for precisely surveying the surface topology of samples, but also for determining their chemical compositions. This is done by exciting the atoms to fluoresce under irradiation by an electron beam while scanning the sample. This secondary emission provides information about the location and type of element, insofar as the analysis is sufficiently precise. However, the lighter elements of the periodic table such as lithium, beryllium, boron, carbon, and nitrogen emit secondary ...

Protecting the body from itself

Protecting the body from itself
2014-09-26
Scientists from A*STAR's Bioprocessing Technology Institute (BTI) have established a clearer relationship between two cells which serve our body's natural defence mechanisms against diseases and infections. Their findings, published in the prestigious journal CELL REPORTS, will help the medical community better understand autoimmunity and could pave the way for treatment of autoimmune diseases. Natural killer T (NKT) cells and B cells are two of many immune cell types that work in tandem to help the body fight against foreign infectious agents. NKT cells have very potent ...

If trees could talk

If trees could talk
2014-09-26
Permafrost thaw drives forest loss in Canada, while drought has killed trees in Panama, southern India and Borneo. In the U.S., in Virginia, over-abundant deer eat trees before they reach maturity, while nitrogen pollution has changed soil chemistry in Canada and Panama. Continents apart, these changes have all been documented by the Smithsonian-led Center for Tropical Forest Science-Forest Global Earth Observatory, CTFS-ForestGEO, which released a new report revealing how forests are changing worldwide. "With 107 collaborators we've published a major overview of what ...

Neurons see what we tell them to see

2014-09-26
Neurons programmed to fire at specific faces—such as the famously reported "Jennifer Aniston neuron"—may be more in line with the conscious recognition of faces than the actual images seen. Subjects presented with a blended face, such as an amalgamation of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, had significantly more firing of such face-specific neurons when they recognized the blended or morphed face as one person or the other. Results of the study led by Christof Koch at the Allen Institute for Brain Science, and carried out by neuroscientists Rodrigo Quian Quiroga at the University ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NCCN Summit seeks to improve care for veterans and first responders with cancer from line-of-duty exposure

ERC Consolidator Grant for soft robotics researcher

Dual-action arts and wellbeing program transforms dementia care

The global plastic waste trade contributes to coastal litter in importing countries, study shows

UT Dallas partners with Tech Mahindra on AI innovation

Blinking less could signal the brain is working harder to listen, Concordia study shows

Male bonobos track females’ reproductive cycle to maximize mating success

New report outlines science priorities for human Mars exploration

Want to curb cannabis-related crashes? Don’t forget older adults, study finds

Expectant management vs medication for patent ductus arteriosus in preterm infants

Pew funds 7 new biomedical research collaborations

The ERC selects 349 mid-career researchers for €728 million in Consolidator Grants

ERC Consolidator Grant awarded to CISPA researcher Rayna Dimitrova

Antimicrobial effects of Syzygium aromaticum and Salvadora persica against common peri-implantitis pathogens in vitro

EVs pose no greater risk to pedestrians than conventional vehicles

Modeling microplastic accumulation under the ocean surface

Pompeii offers insights into ancient Roman building technology

University of Utah engineers give a bionic hand a mind of its own

Transient and long-term risks of common physical activities in people with low back pain

Health care contact days in older adults with metastatic cancer

Brain resilience science reshapes psychiatry from treating illness to building strength

An assessment of the antidepressant potential of deramciclane in two animal tests

Pitt and UPMC study finds epigenetic signature of pediatric traumatic brain injury, paves way for precision recovery tools

Brain discovery opens door to earlier detection of metabolic syndrome in women

SwRI-led study provides insight into oscillations in solar flares

Announcing the third cohort of the Hevolution/AFAR new investigator awards in aging biology and geroscience research

GeoFlame VISION: Using AI and satellite imagery to predict future wildfire risk

Nationwide study suggests that water treatment methods may impact the risk of legionnaires’ disease

Oyster larvae on drugs move slowly and are stressed

Targeting a specific brain circuit may help prevent opioid relapse, WSU study finds

[Press-News.org] High-throughput cell-sorting method can separate 10 billion bacterial cells in 30 minutes
New method could have direct applications for biomedical research and environmental science