The present invention relates to a fine particle capture device.
At present, bulk analysis is used as a method of examining properties of living cells. The bulk analysis is a method which involves collecting/destroying a cell population to analyze genes or proteins. On the other hand, this method contains information of all collected cells and therefore information of non-target cells is also reflected in data. It was also found out in recent years that even if cells are of the same species, expression of their genes is different and it has been desired to establish an analysis method on a single-cell level. Cell capture on the single-cell level is required to realize this.
A method in which cells are captured in wells using a dielectrophoresis technique (see Patent Document 1 and Non-Patent Document 1) and a method in which cells are directly manipulated/captured (see Non-Patent Document 2) are proposed as methods of realizing single cell capture.
In these methods, however, the devices require special structures and skilled manipulation techniques are necessary, and further screening depending on the species of cells is also difficult.
In addition to the aforementioned methods of examining properties of living cells, a technique of singly separating fine particles has been sought to analyze fine particulate matter such as PM10 and PM2.5, and microplastic particles.
An object of the present invention is to solve the problem as described above. Specifically, an object of the present invention is to provide a fine particle capture device capable of capturing single particles by merely flowing a fine particle-containing liquid in flow paths without electricity or any special manipulation.
The present invention provides the following (1) and (2).
The present invention can provide a fine particle capture device capable of capturing single particles by merely flowing a fine particle-containing liquid in flow paths without electricity or any special manipulation.
The fine particle capture device of the invention is a fine particle capture device including: a chip for passing a fine particle-containing liquid therethrough and capturing fine particles contained in the fine particle-containing liquid, wherein the chip has a flat part and a large number of protruding parts provided thereon, and is configured so that the fine particle-containing liquid having entered through an inlet passes on a surface of the flat part in the chip, and through spaces each located between a protruding part and another protruding part adjacent thereto and is discharged from an outlet, wherein the protruding parts are provided on the flat part in a layered form, each layer has a plurality of protruding parts, and the protruding parts are configured so that the fine particle-containing liquid having passed through a layer on an inlet side passes through a layer adjacent thereto on an outlet side, wherein capture parts and bypass parts are formed in each layer, a width between a protruding part and its adjacent protruding part being set to be smaller in the capture parts and larger in the bypass parts than a diameter of the fine particles to be captured, and wherein capture parts are disposed on an outlet side of bypass parts in a specific layer as a part of another layer adjacent thereto.
The fine particle capture device of the invention is described with reference to
The fine particle device 1 of the invention illustrated in
As shown in
As shown in
In the fine particle capture device 1 of the invention as described above, the fine particle-containing liquid having entered through the inlet 3 flows toward the outlet 5 by the action of a pump, hydrostatic pressure, electroosmotic flow or the like. During this process, the fine particle-containing liquid flows on a surface of the flat part 12 in the chip 10, and through spaces each located between a protruding part 14 and another protruding part 14 adjacent thereto, and fine particles get caught and captured between specific protruding parts 14.
The fine particle-containing liquid is not particularly limited as long as it contains fine particles. Examples of the fine particle-containing liquid include human blood and a mixture liquid in which blood is dispersed in a buffer solution. The fine particle-containing liquid may also be a liquid in which fine particles with a particle size of about a few micrometers to a few hundred micrometers are dispersed. Specific examples thereof include a dispersion in which fine particulate matter such as PM10 and PM2.5 are dispersed, and a dispersion in which microplastic particles with an average particle size of about a few micrometers to a few hundred micrometers are dispersed.
The protruding parts 14 are provided on the flat part 12 in a layered form, as shown in
Each layer contains a plurality of protruding parts 14.
The fine particle-containing liquid having entered the fine particle capture device 1 of the invention through the inlet 3 flows over the surface of the flat part 12 to first pass through flow paths between the protruding parts 14 in the first layer and then pass through flow paths between the protruding parts 14 in the second layer. The fine particle capture device is configured so that the fine particle-containing liquid flows thereafter in the same manner to pass through flow paths between the protruding parts 14 in the layer P, and then pass through flow paths between the protruding parts 14 in the layer P+1.
The size and the material of the chip are not particularly limited. The chip may be made of, for example, resins such as silicone rubber, acrylic resin, polycarbonate, cyclic olefin polymer, cyclic olefin copolymer, polystyrene, polyethylene, and polyethylene terephthalate, and an embodiment in which resin is bonded to a substrate of glass or the like is preferable.
As shown in
The width L3 between the layer P and the layer P+1 is preferably 7.5 to 30 μm, and more preferably 8 to 15 μm.
The width L3 means the shortest distance between the layer P and the layer P+1.
In the example of
Further, a capture part 21 is disposed on an outlet side of a bypass part 23 in a specific layer as a part of another layer adjacent thereto. In other words, in the example of
As illustrated in
In the example shown in
The width of the capture parts can be modified for each layer.
For instance, when the fine particle-containing liquid contains fine particles with a relatively large particle size and fine particles with a relatively small particle size, and one wants to capture and separate them, the width of the capture parts in the chip is increased in the layers on the inlet side (upstream side) and is reduced in the layers on the outlet side (downstream side). In this case, by adjusting the width of the capture parts in the inlet side layers to be smaller than the diameter of the large size particles to be captured and larger than the diameter of the small size particles not to be captured, the large size fine particles can be singly captured in the capture parts in the inlet side layers. The small size particles pass through the capture parts in the inlet side layers but are captured in the capture parts on the outlet side by adjusting the width of the capture parts in the outlet side layers to be smaller than the diameter of the small size particles to be captured.
In the plan views as shown in
In a case where the protruding parts 14 have a rectangular or approximately rectangular shape, other fine particles that reached the capture parts 21 already having fine particles captured therein move in the layer direction along the surfaces of the protruding parts 14 and move from the bypass parts 23 to the adjacent layer on the downstream side, where the fine particles are easily captured in the capture parts 21.
Consequently, the inventor has found that the fine particle capture efficiency is increased. In a case where the protruding parts 14 do not have a rectangular shape (in the case of a circular shape or an elliptical shape, for example), their outer shape contains R and fine particles may therefore move along the R instead of moving to the capture parts 21 in the adjacent layer on the downstream side.
A fine particle capture device was fabricated according to the procedure shown below. The width of capture parts in a chip was set to 15 μm in layers on the inlet side (upstream side) and to 5 μm in layers on the outlet side (downstream side). The width of bypass parts in the chip was set to 30 μm in the upstream side layers and to 10 μm in the layers on the outlet side (downstream side), and the width between specific layers and other layers adjacent thereto was set to 50 μm without any exception.
First, a spinner was used to uniformly apply a photosensitive resin (SU-8 3050 manufactured by Nippon Kayaku Co., Ltd.) to a surface of a plate-like silicon wafer.
Next, the photosensitive resin was irradiated with ultraviolet light through a mask.
Next, the photosensitive resin on the silicon wafer exposed to the ultraviolet light was baked at 95° C.
Next, areas which were not exposed to the ultraviolet light were removed with a developer (SU-8 Developer manufactured by Nippon Kayaku Co., Ltd.) to fabricate a mold.
Next, silicone rubber (SILPOT184 manufactured by Dow Corning Corp.) was flowed into the mold.
Next, the silicone rubber was vulcanized under conditions of 100° C. and 0.5 hours.
Next, the silicone rubber was peeled off from the silicon wafer to form a chip having flow paths formed therein.
Next, portions serving as an inlet and an outlet were perforated with punch holes to form a liquid introduction part, thereby fabricating the fine particle capture device.
A light source (L 12530-01 manufactured by Hamamatsu Photonics K.K.) was used to irradiate both a glass substrate having the flow path-formed chip formed therein with vacuum ultraviolet light for 15 seconds. Then, both irradiated surfaces were bonded together to form a chip.
The formed chip was observed with a stereoscopic microscope and an enlarged photo obtained is shown in
Three types of polystyrene beads having diameters of 25 μm, 6 μm, and 1 μm, respectively were dispersed in a phosphate buffer solution (PBS(−) manufactured by Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Ltd.) to adjust a reagent.
Next, a pipette was used to flow the reagent in the fine particle capture device.
Then, the chip of the fine particle capture device was observed with the stereoscopic microscope. An enlarged photo obtained by observing with the stereoscopic microscope is shown in
The enlarged photo revealed that the polystyrene beads with the diameter of 25 μm and the polystyrene beads with the diameter of 6 μm could be singly captured in the capture parts in the upstream side layers and in the capture parts in the downstream side layers, respectively.
This application claims priority based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2020-163376 filed on Sep. 29, 2020, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2020-163376 | Sep 2020 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2021/032514 | 9/3/2021 | WO |