Chemical technology news from across RSC Publishing.
Cell sorting is no fixed matter
08 September 2009
Single cells can now be manipulated in physiological buffers without damage or interruption to cell functions thanks to a new device developed by US scientists.

When light is projected onto the phototransistor, it switches the phototransistor on and generates an electric field locally in the media. The electric field then exerts a force on the particles or cells. |
Optoelectronic tweezers (OETs) use silicon photoconductors to capture light and induce an electric field that can move cells by attracting or repelling them. But because amorphous silicon's photoconductivity is low, the OETs only work in media with low conductivities. Cell culture media and physiological buffers have high conductivities so can only be used with OETs if their salts are replaced with non-conducting molecules. However, this causes cells to lose their normal functions.
- Jody Vykoukal, University of Texas, Houston, US
'The approach is compelling as it yields a cell-handling platform that could readily be implemented, enabling studies of fundamental properties of cells,' comments Jody Vykoukal, an expert in microfluidics and cell separation at the University of Texas, Houston, US.
Hsu expects that the device will have a broad impact in cell-based biology research. 'Equipped with this new tool, we are pursuing the sorting of differentiated neural cells for cell replacement therapy and developing a smart petri dish in which cells can be tested, sorted and collected while they are being cultured,' he says.
Keith Farrington
Enjoy this story? Spread the word using the 'tools' menu on the left or add a comment to the Chemistry World blog.
Link to journal article
Phototransistor-based optoelectronic tweezers for dynamic cell manipulation in cell culture media
Hsan-yin Hsu, Aaron T. Ohta, Pei-Yu Chiou, Arash Jamshidi, Steven L. Neale and Ming C. Wu, Lab Chip, 2009
DOI: 10.1039/b906593h
Also of interest
Catching cells in droplets has enabled scientists to make a highly efficient microchip to separate cells
Lasers blow cells over microwalls
Scientists have used the unusual curving properties of laser beams to hurl microparticles and cells over walls
Acoustic tweezers manipulate cells into patterns on a microchip
