학술논문

Suspendable Hydrogel Nanovials for Massively Parallel Single-Cell Functional Analysis and Sorting
Document Type
article
Source
ACS Nano. 16(5)
Subject
Biotechnology
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Generic health relevance
Inflammatory and immune system
Cricetinae
Mice
Animals
CHO Cells
Hydrogels
Cricetulus
Hybridomas
Single-Cell Analysis
Antigens
Immunoglobulin G
Flow Cytometry
microfluidics
microparticle
single-cell analysis
flow cytometry
antibodies
biomaterials
Nanoscience & Nanotechnology
Language
Abstract
Techniques to analyze and sort single cells based on functional outputs, such as secreted products, have the potential to transform our understanding of cellular biology as well as accelerate the development of next-generation cell and antibody therapies. However, secreted molecules rapidly diffuse away from cells, and analysis of these products requires specialized equipment and expertise to compartmentalize individual cells and capture their secretions. Herein, we describe methods to fabricate hydrogel-based chemically functionalized microcontainers, which we call nanovials, and demonstrate their use for sorting single viable cells based on their secreted products at high-throughput using only commonly accessible laboratory infrastructure. These nanovials act as solid supports that facilitate attachment of a variety of adherent and suspension cell types, partition uniform aqueous compartments, and capture secreted proteins. Solutions can be exchanged around nanovials to perform fluorescence immunoassays on secreted proteins. Using this platform and commercial flow sorters, we demonstrate high-throughput screening of stably and transiently transfected producer cells based on relative IgG production. Chinese hamster ovary cells sorted based on IgG production regrew and maintained a high secretion phenotype over at least a week, yielding >40% increase in bulk IgG production rates. We also sorted hybridomas and B lymphocytes based on antigen-specific antibody production. Hybridoma cells secreting an antihen egg lysozyme antibody were recovered from background cells, enriching a population of ∼4% prevalence to >90% following sorting. Leveraging the high-speed sorting capabilities of standard sorters, we sorted >1 million events in