(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. – In the quest to address infertility, Cornell University researchers have developed a groundbreaking device that could simplify and automate oocyte cumulus removal, a critical step in assisted reproductive technologies.
Their vibration-powered chip not only simplifies a complex procedure but also extends it to areas of the world lacking skilled embryologists or well-funded labs—reducing overall costs. This offers hope to millions of couples struggling with infertility – and makes fertility treatments more accessible worldwide.
“This platform is a potential game-changer,” said Alireza Abbaspourrad, associate professor of food chemistry and ingredient technology in food science. “It reduces the need for skilled technicians, minimizes contamination risks and ensures consistent results – all while being portable and cost-effective.”
Abbaspourrad is co-author of “On-Chip Oocyte Cumulus Removal using Vibration Induced Flow,” published Sept. 5 in the journal Lab on a Chip.
Doctors treating infertility need to do a critical step: gently separate protective cumulus cells from oocytes, the developing egg cells. The process, known as cumulus removal (CR), is essential for evaluating oocyte maturity before spermatozoon injection, or ensuring successful fertilization after insemination in in vitro fertilization.
Traditionally, CR relies on manual pipetting: by flushing the single oocyte repeatedly with a micropipette, cumulus cells are detached from the oocyte. However, the technique demands precision, expertise and significant time. Errors can lead to damaged oocytes or failed fertilization, making the procedure a delicate and labor-intensive task.
The team’s innovation: a disposable, open-surface chip that uses vibrations, which they call vibration-induced flow, to automate CR. The chip features a spiral array of micropillars that create a whirling flow when vibrated, separating smaller cumulus cells from larger oocytes.
“The process is fast, efficient, noninvasive and more consistent, while reducing manual labor and preserving embryo development outcomes,” said Amirhossein Favakeh, a doctoral candidate in Abbaspourrad’s lab and a co-author of the study. “The oocytes remain safely in the loading chamber, while the cumulus cells are swept into an adjacent collection well.”
To ensure the safety of the technique, the team compared fertilization and embryo development rates between oocytes denuded manually and those treated with vibration induced flow. The results were nearly identical: fertilization rates were 90.7% for manual pipetting and 93.1% for vibration induced flow, while the rate of formation of blastocysts, balls of cells formed early in a pregnancy, were 50.0% and 43.1%, respectively.
“This shows that our method doesn’t compromise the developmental potential of the oocytes,” Abbaspourrad said.
“Ordinarily, the whole process is costly and delicate; clinics invest a lot of time in training, and it is very dependent on human resources,” Abbaspourrad said. “With this, you don’t need a highly trained human to do it. And what is really important is there is almost no chance of damaging or losing the cell.”
For additional information, read this Cornell Chronicle story.
-30-
END
Good vibrations could revolutionize assisted reproductive technology
2025-09-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
More scrutiny of domestic fishing fleets at ports could help deter illegal fishing
2025-09-05
Embargoed: Not for Release Until 2:00 pm U.S. Eastern Time Friday, 05 September 2025
In brief:
Countries that have ratified the Port State Measures Agreement, which entered into force in 2016, are required to designate certain ports for foreign vessels to land their fish and undergo standardized inspections to identify illegal catches.
As more countries adopted the internationally binding agreement between 2016 and 2021, the distance that foreign fishing vessels needed to travel to reach a port within a country that had not ratified the treaty doubled.
Domestic fishing ...
Scientists transform plastic waste into efficient CO2 capture materials
2025-09-05
Scientists transform plastic waste into efficient CO2 capture materials
From waste to valuable resource: Chemists at the University of Copenhagen have developed a method to convert plastic waste into a climate solution for efficient and sustainable CO2 capture. This is killing two birds with one stone as they address two of the world’s biggest challenges: plastic pollution and the climate crisis.
As CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere keep rising regardless of years of political intentions to limit emissions, the world’s ...
Discovery of North America’s role in Asia’s monsoons offers new insights into climate change
2025-09-05
The study, published today (5 September) in the journal Science Advances, indicates how the heating in North America can trigger remote effects in Asia – this could be further exacerbated by anthropogenic global warming and human modification of the North American land surface. The authors of the study say their findings emphasise the importance of global cooperation in addressing climate change.
Using climate models, scientists from the University of Bristol and the Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research (ITP) from the Chinese Academy of Sciences ...
MD Anderson and Phoenix SENOLYTIX announce strategic cross-licensing agreement to enhance inducible switch technologies for cell and gene therapies
2025-09-05
Agreement focuses on rimiducid, an agent used to activate certain safety switch technologies in cell therapies
Phoenix receives a supply of rimiducid and support to seek regulatory approval of a new proprietary injectable formulation, retaining exclusive rights for use in its novel in vivo gene therapy programs
MD Anderson receives rights to the new formulation of rimiducid for use with its inducible switches exclusively in ex vivo cell therapies
Collaborators hope to use these tools to further enhance cell and gene therapies
HOUSTON and MIAMI, SEPTEMBER 5, 2025 ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Phoenix SENOLYTIX, Inc., today announced ...
Researchers discover massive geo-hydrogen source to the west of the Mussau Trench
2025-09-05
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the solar system. As a source of clean energy, hydrogen is well-suited for sustainable development, and Earth is a natural hydrogen factory. However, most hydrogen vents reported to date are small, and the geological processes responsible for hydrogen formation—as well as the quantities that can be preserved in geological settings—remain unclear.
To better understand the availability of geological hydrogen, researchers from the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IOCAS) and their collaborators discovered and analyzed a large pipe swarm—a ...
Even untouched ecosystems are losing insects at alarming rates, new study finds
2025-09-05
A new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shows that insect populations are rapidly declining even in relatively undisturbed landscapes, raising concerns about the health of ecosystems that depend on them.
Keith Sockman, associate professor of biology at UNC-Chapel Hill, quantified the abundance of flying insects during 15 seasons between 2004 and 2024 on a subalpine meadow in Colorado, a site with 38 years of weather data and minimal direct human impact. He discovered an average annual decline of 6.6% in insect abundance, amounting to a ...
Adaptive visible-infrared camouflage with wide-range radiation control for extreme ambient temperatures
2025-09-05
Breaking free from spectral limits
From thermal cameras to multispectral sensors, modern surveillance technologies are increasingly difficult to evade, creating urgent demand for camouflage that adapts across both visible and infrared bands. Yet progress has long been constrained by three persistent challenges: the tight coupling between visible color shifts and infrared emissivity, which forces trade-offs; the limited thermal modulation range of existing devices, typically <15 °C and insufficient for extreme environments such as deserts with >60 °C swings; and scalability constraints, with most prototypes restricted ...
MD Anderson research highlights for September 5, 2025
2025-09-05
MD Anderson Research Highlights for September 5, 2025
Clinical trials show promising results in treating pancreatic and colorectal cancers
New treatment strategies improve outcomes for patients with kidney and testicular cancers
Novel research techniques enable advances in gene-drug interactions, breast cancer progression, and identifying pre-cancerous lesions
Biomarkers help predict risk for oral cancer metastasis
HOUSTON, SEPTEMBER 5, 2025 ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center’s Research Highlights showcases the latest breakthroughs in cancer care, research ...
Physicists create a new kind of time crystal that humans can actually see
2025-09-05
Imagine a clock that doesn’t have electricity, but its hands and gears spin on their own for all eternity.
In a new study, physicists at the University of Colorado Boulder have used liquid crystals, the same materials that are in your phone display, to create such a clock—or, at least, as close as humans can get to that idea. The team’s advancement is a new example of a “time crystal.” That’s the name for a curious phase of matter in which the pieces, such as atoms or other particles, exist in constant motion.
The researchers aren’t the first to make a time crystal, but their creation is the first that humans can actually ...
Reminder: Final media invitation for EPSC-DPS2025 and details of media briefings on RAMSES and Juno missions
2025-09-05
The Europlanet Science Congress 2025 will be held jointly with the annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society’s Division of Planetary Science (EPSC-DPS2025) from 7–12 September 2025 at Finlandia Hall, Helsinki, Finland. With around 1800 participants expected to join in person and online, it will be the largest planetary science meeting held to date in Europe.
Press briefings will be livestreamed and press notices on presentations of interest to the media will be issued by the EPSC-DPS2025 ...