Protective polymer coatings for high-throughput, high-purity cellular isolation
Abstract:
Cell-based therapies are emerging as the next frontier of medicine, offering a plausible path forward in the treatment of many devastating diseases. Critically, current methods for antigen positive cell sorting lack a high throughput method for delivering ultrahigh purity populations, prohibiting the application of some cell-based therapies to widespread diseases. Here we show the first use of targeted, protective polymer coatings on cells for the high speed enrichment of cells. Individual, antigen-positive cells are coated with a biocompatible hydrogel which protects the cells from a surfactant solution, while uncoated cells are immediately lysed. After lysis, the polymer coating is removed through orthogonal photochemistry, and the isolate has >50% yield of viable cells and these cells proliferate at rates comparable to control cells. Minority cell populations are enriched from erythrocyte-depleted blood to >99% purity …
Año de publicación:
2015
Keywords:
Fuente:
Tipo de documento:
Other
Estado:
Acceso abierto
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Biomateriales
- Ciencia de materiales
Áreas temáticas:
- Textiles