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chemistrode: A droplet-based microfluidic device for stimulation and recording with high temporal, spatial, and chemical resolution

Microelectrodes enable localized electrical stimulation and recording, and they have revolutionized our understanding of the spatiotemporal dynamics of systems that generate or respond to electrical signals. However, such comprehensive understanding of systems that rely on molecular signals--e.g., c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2008-11, Vol.105 (44), p.16843-16848
Main Authors: Chen, Delai, Du, Wenbin, Liu, Ying, Liu, Weishan, Kuznetsov, Andrey, Mendez, Felipe E, Philipson, Louis H, Ismagilov, Rustem F
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Microelectrodes enable localized electrical stimulation and recording, and they have revolutionized our understanding of the spatiotemporal dynamics of systems that generate or respond to electrical signals. However, such comprehensive understanding of systems that rely on molecular signals--e.g., chemical communication in multicellular neural, developmental, or immune systems--remains elusive because of the inability to deliver, capture, and interpret complex chemical information. To overcome this challenge, we developed the "chemistrode," a plug-based microfluidic device that enables stimulation, recording, and analysis of molecular signals with high spatial and temporal resolution. Stimulation with and recording of pulses as short as 50 ms was demonstrated. A pair of chemistrodes fabricated by multilayer soft lithography recorded independent signals from 2 locations separated by 15 μm. Like an electrode, the chemistrode does not need to be built into an experimental system--it is simply brought into contact with a chemical or biological substrate, and, instead of electrical signals, molecular signals are exchanged. Recorded molecular signals can be injected with additional reagents and analyzed off-line by multiple, independent techniques in parallel (e.g., fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, MALDI-MS, and fluorescence microscopy). When recombined, these analyses provide a time-resolved chemical record of a system's response to stimulation. Insulin secretion from a single murine islet of Langerhans was measured at a frequency of 0.67 Hz by using the chemistrode. This article characterizes and tests the physical principles that govern the operation of the chemistrode to enable its application to probing local dynamics of chemically responsive matter in chemistry and biology.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0807916105