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1.
Positive selection of CD34+ blood progenitor cells from circulation has been reported to improve patient recovery in applications of autologous transplantation. Current magnetic separation methods rely on cell capture and release on solid supports rather than sorting from flowing suspensions, which limits the range of therapeutic applications and the process scale up. We tested CD34+ cell immunomagnetic labeling and isolation from fresh leukocyte fraction of peripheral blood (leukapheresis) using the continuous quadrupole magnetic flow sorter (QMS), consisting of a flow channel (SHOT, Greenville, IN) and a quadrupole magnet with a maximum field intensity (B(o)) of 1.42 T and a mean force field strength (S(m)) of 1.45 x 10(8) TA/m(2). Both the sample magnetophoretic mobility (m) and the inlet and outlet flow patterns highly affect the QMS performance. Seven commercial progenitor cell labeling reagent combinations were quantitatively evaluated by measuring magnetophoretic mobility of a high CD34 expression cell line, KG-1a, using the cell tracking velocimeter (CTV). The CD34 Progenitor Cell Isolation Kit (Miltenyi Biotec, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany) showed the strongest labeling of KG-1a cells and was selected for progenitor cell enrichment from 11 fresh and 11 cryopreserved clinical leukapheresis samples derived from different donors. The CD34+ cells were isolated with a purity of 60-96%, a recovery of 18-60%, an enrichment rate of 12-169, and a throughput of (1.7-9.3) x 10(4) cells/s. The results also showed a highly regular dependence of the QMS performance on the flow conditions that agreed with the theoretical predictions based on the CD34+ cell magnetophoretic mobility.  相似文献   

2.
Human CD34+ cells from cord blood were separated in a two-step process using a commercial, immunomagnetic cell retention system. The performance of the system was evaluated by analyzing a number of eluents from the separations with a number of analytical techniques. In addition to cell counts and flow cytometry analysis, a new experimental technique that is undergoing development, cell tracking velocimetry (CTV), was used. CTV measures the degree to which a cell is immunomagnetically labeled, known as the magnetophoretic mobility, of a population of cells on a cell-by-cell basis and presents the results in the form of a histogram similar to flow cytometry data. The average recovery and purity of CD34+ cells from 10 separations was 52% and 60%, respectively. CTV analysis indicated that the mean magnetophoretic mobility of the positively enriched CD34 cells was 9.64 x 10(-5) mm3/T-A-s, while the mean mobility from negative eluents was -2.02 x 10(-6) mm3/T-A-s, very similar to the mobility of unlabeled cells. Within the positive eluents, the range of magnetophoretic mobility was approximately 50-fold, representing a plausible 50-fold range in surface CD34 antigen expression. CTV analysis also indicated that in some separations, positive cells were not retained by the immunomagnetic cell retention system. Finally, preliminary studies indicate that monocytes might be a primary cause in the lower purities and recoveries seen in this study. It is suggested that the monocytes phagocytose the magnetic nanobeads and become sufficiently magnetized to be retained within the Miltenyi column, reducing the purity of the positive eluent.  相似文献   

3.
Proper antibody labeling is a fundamental step in the positive selection/isolation of rare cancer cells using immunomagnetic cell separation technology. Using either a two-step or single-step labeling protocol, we examined a combination of six different antibodies specific for three different antigens (epithelial specific antigen, epithelial membrane antigen, and HER-2/Neu) on two different breast cancer cell lines (HCC1954 and MCF-7). When a two-step labeling protocol was used (i.e., anti-surface marker-fluoroscein-isothiocyanate [FITC] [primary Ab], anti-FITC magnetic colloid [secondary Ab]) saturation of the primary antibody was determined using fluorescence intensity measurements from flow cytometry (FCM). The saturation of the secondary antibody (or saturation of a single-step labeling) was determined using magnetophoretic mobility measurements from cell tracking velocimetry (CTV). When the maximum magnetophoretic mobility was the primary objective, our results demonstrate that the quantities necessary for antibody saturation with respect to fluorescence intensity were generally higher than those recommended by the manufacturer. The results demonstrate that magnetophoretic mobility varies depending on the types of cell lines, primary antibodies, and concentration of secondary magnetic colloid-conjugated antibody. It is concluded that saturation studies are a vital preparatory step in any separation method involving antibody labeling, especially those that require the specificity of rare cell detection.  相似文献   

4.
Bioaffinity interactions have been, and continue to be, successfully adapted from nature for use in separation and detection applications. It has been previously reported that the magnetophoretic mobility of labeled cells show a saturation type phenomenon as a function of the concentration of the free antibody-magnetic nanoparticle conjugate which is consistent with other reports of antibody-fluorophore binding. Starting with the standard antibody-antigen relationship, a model was developed which takes into consideration multi-valence interactions, and various attributes of flow cytometry (FCM) and cell tracking velocimetry (CTV) measurements to determine both the apparent dissociation constant and the antibody-binding capacity (ABC) of a cell. This model was then evaluated on peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) labeled with anti CD3 antibodies conjugated to FITC, PE, or DM (magnetic nanoparticles). Reasonable agreements between the model and the experiments were obtained. In addition, estimates of the limitation of the number of magnetic nanoparticles that can bind to a cell as a result of steric hinderance was consistent with measured values of magnetophoretic mobility. Finally, a scale-up model was proposed and tested which predicts the amount of antibody conjugates needed to achieve a given level of saturation as the total number of cells reaches 10(10), the number of cells needed for certain clinical applications, such as T-cell depletions for mismatched bone marrow transplants.  相似文献   

5.
Magnetophoretic cell sorting is a function of antibody binding capacity   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Antibody binding capacity (ABC) is a term representing a cell's ability to bind antibodies, correlating with the number of specific cellular antigens expressed on that cell. ABC allows magnetically conjugated antibodies to bind to the targeted cells, imparting a magnetophoretic mobility on each targeted cell. This enables sorting based on differences in the cell magnetophoretic mobility and, potentially, a magnetic separation based on the differences in the cell ABC values. A cell's ABC value is a particularly important factor in continuous magnetic cell separation. This work investigates the relationship between ABC and magnetic cell separation efficiency by injection of a suspension of immunomagnetically labeled quantum simply cellular calibration microbeads of known ABC values into fluid flowing through a quadrupole magnetic sorter. The elution profiles of the outlet streams were evaluated using UV detectors. Optimal separation flow rate was shown to correlate with the ABC of these microbeads. Comparing experimental and theoretical results, the theory correctly predicted maximum separation flow rates but overestimated the separation fractional recoveries.  相似文献   

6.
METHODS: A methodology and a mathematical relationship have been developed that allow quantitation of the expression levels of cellular surface antigens, in terms of antibody binding capacities (ABC). This methodology uses immunomagnetically labeled cells and calibration microbeads combined with cell tracking velocimetry (CTV) technology to measure magnetophoretic mobilities corresponding to cellular ABC. The mobility measurements were accomplished by microscopically recording and calculating the velocity of immunomagnetically labeled QSC microbeads and cells in a nearly constant magnetic energy gradient. RESULTS: Transformed fibrosarcoma cells were given controlled treatments of interferon-alpha in order to manipulate CD2 antigen expression levels. These cells were then immunomagnetically labeled with anti-CD2 FITC antibodies and anti-FITC MACS paramagnetic nanoparticles. Measured magnetophoretic mobilities were used to calculate ABC for these cells, corresponding to CD2 expression levels. CONCLUSION: The results from CTV and flow cytometry (FCM) qualitatively verify that these fibrosarcoma cells express elevated levels of CD2 molecules with increasing interferon-alpha treatment from 0 to 24 h. The mean basal CD2 expression level, in terms of ABC, was calculated to be 27,000 from CTV analysis, whereas FCM indicates a comparable ABC value of 33,000.  相似文献   

7.
Magnetic cell separation methods commonly utilize paramagnetic materials conjugated to antibodies that target specific cell surface molecules. The amount of magnetic material bound to a cell is directly proportional to the magnetophoretic mobility of that cell. A mathematical model has been developed which characterizes the fundamental parameters controlling the amount of magnetic material bound, and thus, the magnetophoretic mobility of an immunomagnetically labeled cell. In characterization of the paramagnetic labeling, one of the parameters of interest is the increase in magnetophoretic mobility due to the secondary antibody binding to multiple epitopes on the primary antibody, referred to as the "secondary antibody binding amplification," Psi. Secondary antibody-binding amplification has been investigated and quantitated by comparing the mobilities of lymphocytes directly labeled with anti-CD4 MACS (Miltenyi Biotec, Auburn, CA) magnetic nanoparticle antibody with the mobilities of lymphocytes from the same sample labeled with two different indirect antibody-labeling schemes. Each indirect labeling scheme incorporated a primary mouse anti-CD4 FITC antibody that provides both FITC and mouse-specific binding sites for two different secondary antibody-magnetic nanoparticle conjugates: either anti-FITC MACS magnetic nanoparticle antibody or anti-mouse MACS magnetic nanoparticle antibody. The magnetophoretic mobilities of the immunomagnetically labeled cells were obtained using Cell Tracking Velocimetry (CTV). The results indicate that an average of 3.4 anti-FITC MACS magnetic nanoparticle antibodies bind to each primary CD4 FITC antibody, Psi(1,2f) = 3.4 +/- 0.33, and that approximately one, Psi(1,2m) = 0.98 +/- 0.081, anti-mouse MACS magnetic nanoparticle antibody binds to each primary mouse CD4 FITC antibody on a CD4 positive lymphocyte. These results have provided a better understanding of the antibody-binding mechanisms used in paramagnetic cell labeling for magnetic cell separation.  相似文献   

8.
Magnetic isolation is a promising method for separating and concentrating pancreatic islets of Langerhans for transplantation in Type 1 diabetes patients. We are developing a continuous magnetic islet sorter to overcome the restrictions of current purification methods that result in limited yield and viability. In Quadrupole Magnetic Sorting (QMS) islets are magnetized by infusing superparamagnetic microbeads into islets' vasculature via arteries that serve the pancreas. The performance of the islet sorter depends on the resulting speed of the islets in an applied magnetic field, a property known as magnetophoretic mobility. Essential to the design and successful operation of the QMS is a method to measure the magnetophoretic mobilities of magnetically infused islets. We have adapted a Magnetic Particle Tracking Velocimeter (MPTV) to measure the magnetophoretic mobility of particles up to 1,000 μm in diameter. Velocity measurements are performed in a well-characterized uniform magnetic energy gradient using video imaging followed by analysis of the video images with a computer algorithm that produces a histogram of absolute mobilities. MPTV was validated using magnetic agarose beads serving as islet surrogates and subjecting them to QMS. Mobility distributions of labeled porcine islets indicated that magnetized islets have sufficient mobility to be captured by the proposed sorting method, with this result confirmed in test isolations of magnetized islets.  相似文献   

9.
METHODS: A methodology and a mathematical theory have been developed, which allow quantitation of the expression levels of cellular surface antigens using immunomagnetic labels and cell tracking velocimetry (CTV) technology. RESULTS: Quantum Simply Cellular (QSC) microbeads were immunomagnetically labeled with anti-CD2 fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) antibodies and anti-FITC MACS paramagnetic nanoparticles. Magnetophoretic mobility has been defined as the magnetically induced velocity of the labeled cell or microbead divided by the magnetophoretic driving force, proportional to the magnetic energy density gradient. DISCUSSION: Using computer imaging and processing technology, the mobility measurements were accomplished by microscopically recording and calculating the velocity of immunomagnetically labeled QSC microbeads in a nearly constant magnetic energy gradient. A calibration curve correlating the measured magnetophoretic mobility of the immunomagnetically labeled microbeads to their antibody binding capacities (ABC) has been obtained. CONCLUSION: The results, in agreement with theory, indicate a linear relationship between magnetophoretic mobility and ABC for microbeads with less than 30,000 ABC. The mathematical relationships and QSC standardization curve obtained allow determination of the number of surface antigens on similarly immunomagnetically labeled cells.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Continuous flow immunomagnetic separation is an attractive alternative to current batch mode immunomagnetic separation methods because it is capable of high sorting speeds at mild cell conditions, and grants the operator better control of separation process. The control of the separation is dependent on knowledge of the amount of magnetic label attached to the cell (magnetic labeling intensity), however. Determination of the magnetic labeling is accomplished by measuring cell magnetophoretic mobility using a newly developed technique of Cell Tracking Velocimetry (CTV). METHODS: Flow cytometry was used to define the antibody binding characteristics of a fluorescently tagged primary antibody. Subsequently, CTV was used to measure antibody-binding characteristics of a magnetically tagged secondary antibody. RESULTS: The results of this study show that CTV is capable of providing valuable information concerning the cell labeling by magnetically tagged antibodies. It was demonstrated that the magnetically conjugated antibody binding curve exhibits the same exponential increase to saturation characteristics as that seen with the fluorescently tagged antibody. Further, it was shown that the intensity of the secondary magnetic labeling is directly proportional to the intensity of the primary fluorescent label. CONCLUSIONS: CTV is an accurate tool for evaluation of magnetically conjugated antibodies. The ability to determine the intensity of magnetic labeling is necessary for the development of continuous flow immunomagnetic separations based on cell magnetophoresis.  相似文献   

11.
Cell separation is important in medical and biological research and plays an increasingly important role in clinical therapy and diagnostics, such as rare cancer cell detection in blood. The immunomagnetic labeling of cells with antibodies conjugated to magnetic nanospheres gives rise to a proportional relationship between the number of magnetic nanospheres attached to the cell and the cell surface marker number. This enables the potential fractionation of cell populations by magnetophoretic mobility (MM). We exploit this feature with our apparatus, the Dipole Magnet Flow Fractionator (DMFF), which consists of an isodynamic magnetic field, an orthogonally-oriented thin ribbon of cell suspension in continuous sheath flow, and ten outlet flows. From a sample containing a 1:1 mixture of immunomagnetically labeled (label+) and unlabeled (label-) cells, we achieved an increase in enrichment of the label+ cell fraction with increasing outlet numbers in the direction of the magnetic field gradient (up to 10-fold). The total recovery of the ten outlet fractions was 90.0+/-7.7%. The mean MM of label+ cells increased with increasing outlet number by up to a factor of 2.3. The postulated proportionality between the number of attached magnetic beads and the number of cell surface markers was validated by comparison of MM measured by cell tracking velocimetry (CTV) with cell florescence intensity measured by flow cytometry.  相似文献   

12.
Magnetophoresis is the process of the particle motion under the influence of a magnetic field. The magnetic particle and medium are considered responsive to the imposed magnetic field, and the material property that describes the response to the external magnetic field is relative magnetic permeability, and the magnetic susceptibility. The present work aims to evaluate the effect of internal and external physiological parameters on the erythrocytes' magnetophoretic mobility (MM) using Cell Tracking Velocimetry (CTV). The results of this study showed that there are a strong correlation between MM and several physiological blood parameters such as mean corpuscle hemoglobin (MCH), red blood cells distribution width (RDW), mean corpuscle hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), and fibrinogen.  相似文献   

13.
Magnetophoresis is the process of the particle motion under the influence of a magnetic field. The magnetic particle and medium are considered responsive to the imposed magnetic field, and the material property that describes the response to the external magnetic field is relative magnetic permeability, and the magnetic susceptibility. The present work aims to evaluate the effect of internal and external physiological parameters on the erythrocytes' magnetophoretic mobility (MM) using Cell Tracking Velocimetry (CTV). The results of this study showed that there are a strong correlation between MM and several physiological blood parameters such as mean corpuscle hemoglobin (MCH), red blood cells distribution width (RDW), mean corpuscle hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), and fibrinogen.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: The magnetic separation of a cell population based on cell surface markers is a critical step in many biological and clinical laboratories. In this study, the effect of antibody concentration on the separation of human natural killer cells in a commercial, immunomagnetic cell separation system was investigated. METHODS: Specifically, the degree of saturation of antibody binding sites using a two-step antibody sandwich was quantified. The quantification of the first step, a primary anti-CD56-PE antibody, was achieved through fluorescence intensity measurements using a flow cytometer. The quantification of the second step, an anti-PE-microbeads antibody reagent, was achieved through magnetophoretic mobility measurements using cell tracking velocimetry. RESULTS: From the results of these studies, two different labeling protocols were used to separate CD56+ cells from human, peripheral blood by a Miltenyi Biotech MiniMACS cell separation system. The first of these two labeling protocols was based on company recommendations, whereas the second was based on the results of the saturation studies. The results from these studies demonstrate that the magnetophoretic mobility is a function of both primary and secondary antibody concentrations and that mobility does have an effect on the performance of the separation system. CONCLUSIONS: As the mobility increased due to an increase in bound antibodies, the positive cells were almost completely eliminated from the negative eluent. However, with an increase in bound antibodies, and thus mobility, the total amount of positive cells recovered decreases. It is speculated that these cells are irreversibly retained in the column. These results demonstrate the complexity of immunomagnetic cell separation and the need to further optimize the cell separation process.  相似文献   

15.
Isolation of floating fetal cells from maternal circulation has immense potential in diagnosing of various genetic alterations in the developing fetus. Currently, non-invasive fetal cell isolation methods include fluorescence/magnetic activated cell sorting that use antibodies specific to fetal cells. Apart from being complex and expensive the biggest challenge associated with these cell sorting methods is low concentration of fetal cells in maternal peripheral blood. In order to make the complete process much simpler and effective, we propose a novel method for isolation of floating fetal cells that uses a continuous flow of maternal blood for effectively harvesting a higher fetal cell volume compared to any other existing method. The isolation mechanism is based on the difference in the magnetic susceptibility of fetal hemoglobin (HbF-α2γ2) and maternal hemoglobin (HbA-α2β2). HbF has high oxygen saturation capacity (diamagnetic) compared to HbA (paramagnetic), and this difference in saturation is further enhanced by presence of 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG). When placed in magnetic field, these cells get separated based on the difference (p ≤ 0.001) in their magnetophoretic mobility. This separation method may also be used for detection of fetomaternal hemorrhages and also treatment of Rh incompatibility.  相似文献   

16.
Nonmagnetic microparticles (e.g., cells, polymer beads) immersed in a magnetic fluid (ferrofluid) under a nonuniform magnetic field experience a magnetophoretic force in the direction of decreasing magnetic field strength. This phenomenon was exploited in the development of a continuous magnetophoretic countercurrent separation for the removal and concentration of micron-sized particles from aqueous suspensions, and in particular as a viable approach for cell clarification of raw fermentation broth. A magnetic fluid is added to the cell suspension, the mixture is introduced to the magnetic separator, which consists of an open flow tube passing between pairs of magnets that move in a direction counter to the flow of the suspension. The cells are pushed ahead of the magnet pairs owing to the magnetophoretic forces acting on them, collected in a tube upstream of the feed injection point, and removed as a concentrated suspension for further treatment.  相似文献   

17.
This paper presents the development of a microsystem for separating suspended breast cancer cells in peripheral blood and for sorting them based on their electrophysiological characteristics. A continuous paramagnetic capture mode (PMC) magnetophoretic microseparator was utilized for the isolation of suspended breast cancer cells in peripheral blood based on the native magnetic properties of blood cells without any tagging such as with magnetic probes. A micro-electrical impedance spectroscopy (mu-EIS) system was used as a downstream cell analysis tool to extract the pathological characteristics from the breast cancer cells. The system was fabricated on silicon and glass substrates utilizing microfabrication and stereolithography technologies. The experimental results of the PMC microseparator show that 94.8% of the breast cancer cells could be continuously separated out from a spiked blood sample with a 0.2 T external magnetic flux. The electrical impedances of human breast cancer cell lines of different pathological stages (MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, and MDA-MB-435) were measured using mu-EIS and compared to those of normal human breast tissue cell line MCF-10A.  相似文献   

18.
The objective of this study was to compare the performance of two immunomagnetic separation technologies to deplete T cells from buffy coats of human blood. Specifically, two versions of the commercial MACS(R) Technology: MiniMACS and SuperMACS, and a prototype, flow-through system, the QMS, were evaluated. Peripheral blood mononuclear leukocytes (PBL) were isolated from buffy coats and an immunomagnetic separation of CD3(+) cells was conducted using company and optimized labeling protocols. To mimic peripheral blood containing bone marrow purged hematopoietic stem cells, HSC, CD34 expressing-cells (KG1a) were spiked into PBL prior to T-cell depletion once optimized depletion conditions were determined. Once the labeling protocol was optimized, the MiniMACS system performed well by producing a highly enriched CD3(+) fraction, and a respectable level of depletion of T cells and recovery of KG1a cells in the depleted fraction; an average log(10) depletion of T cells of 2.88 +/- 0.17 and an average recovery of the KG1a cells of 60.8 +/- 5.94% (n = 14). The performance of the SuperMACS system was very similar with an average log(10) depletion of T cells of 2.89 +/- 0.22 and an average recovery of KG1a of 63.1 +/- 8.55% (n = 10). In contrast, the QMS system produced an average log(10) depletion of T cells of 3.98 +/- 0.33 (n = 16) with a corresponding average recovery of 57.9 +/- 16.6% of the spiked CD34+ cells. The aforementioned QMS performance values were obtained using sorting speeds ranging from 2.5 x 10(4) to 1.7 x 10(5) cells per second. It is suggested that the lack of a 100% recovery of the unlabeled KG1a cells is the result of a previously reported "drafting" phenomena which pulls unlabeled cells in the direction of the magnetically labeled cells thereby resulting in loss of the unlabeled cells.  相似文献   

19.
Cell sorting is a dynamical cooperative phenomenon that is fundamental for tissue morphogenesis and tissue homeostasis. According to Steinberg's differential adhesion hypothesis, the structure of sorted cell aggregates is determined by physical characteristics of the respective tissues, the tissue surface tensions. Steinberg postulated that tissue surface tensions result from quantitative differences in intercellular adhesion. Several experiments in cell cultures as well as in developing organisms support this hypothesis.The question of how tissue surface tension might result from differential adhesion was addressed in some theoretical models. These models describe the cellular interdependence structure once the temporal evolution has stabilized. In general, these models are capable of reproducing sorted patterns. However, the model dynamics at the cellular scale are defined implicitly and are not well-justified. The precise mechanism describing how differential adhesion generates the observed sorting kinetics at the tissue level is still unclear.It is necessary to formulate the concepts of cell level kinetics explicitly. Only then it is possible to understand the temporal development at the cellular and tissue scales. Here we argue that individual cell mobility is reduced the more the cells stick to their neighbors. We translate this assumption into a precise mathematical model which belongs to the class of stochastic interacting particle systems. Analyzing this model, we are able to predict the emergent sorting behavior at the population level. We describe qualitatively the geometry of cell segregation depending on the intercellular adhesion parameters. Furthermore, we derive a functional relationship between intercellular adhesion and surface tension and highlight the role of cell mobility in the process of sorting. We show that the interaction between the cells and the boundary of a confining vessel has a major impact on the sorting geometry.  相似文献   

20.
Studying cell functions for cellomics studies often requires the use of purified individual cells from mixtures of various kinds of cells. We have developed a new non-destructive on-chip cell sorting system for single cell based cultivation, by exploiting the advantage of microfluidics and electrostatic force. The system consists of the following two parts: a cell sorting chip made of poly-dimethylsiloxane (PDMS) on a 0.2-mm-thick glass slide, and an image analysis system with a phase-contrast/fluorescence microscope. The unique features of our system include (i) identification of a target from sample cells is achieved by comparison of the 0.2-μm-resolution phase-contrast and fluorescence images of cells in the microchannel every 1/30 s; (ii) non-destructive sorting of target cells in a laminar flow by application of electrostatic repulsion force for removing unrequited cells from the one laminar flow to the other; (iii) the use of agar gel for electrodes in order to minimize the effect on cells by electrochemical reactions of electrodes, and (iv) pre-filter, which was fabricated within the channel for removal of dust contained in a sample solution from tissue extracts. The sorting chip is capable of continuous operation and we have purified more than ten thousand cells for cultivation without damaging them. Our design has proved to be very efficient and suitable for the routine use in cell purification experiments.  相似文献   

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