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Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation

[Image: see text] 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 populatio...

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Autores principales: Romero, Gabriela, Lilly, Jacob J., Abraham, Nathan S., Shin, Hainsworth Y., Balasubramaniam, Vivek, Izumi, Tadahide, Berron, Brad J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2015
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4544319/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26244409
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.5b06298
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author Romero, Gabriela
Lilly, Jacob J.
Abraham, Nathan S.
Shin, Hainsworth Y.
Balasubramaniam, Vivek
Izumi, Tadahide
Berron, Brad J.
author_facet Romero, Gabriela
Lilly, Jacob J.
Abraham, Nathan S.
Shin, Hainsworth Y.
Balasubramaniam, Vivek
Izumi, Tadahide
Berron, Brad J.
author_sort Romero, Gabriela
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] 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, whereas the entire batch process requires 1 h and <$2000 in equipment. Batch scale-up is only contingent on irradiation area for the coating photopolymerization, as surfactant-based lysis can be easily achieved on any scale.
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spelling pubmed-45443192016-08-05 Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation Romero, Gabriela Lilly, Jacob J. Abraham, Nathan S. Shin, Hainsworth Y. Balasubramaniam, Vivek Izumi, Tadahide Berron, Brad J. ACS Appl Mater Interfaces [Image: see text] 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, whereas the entire batch process requires 1 h and <$2000 in equipment. Batch scale-up is only contingent on irradiation area for the coating photopolymerization, as surfactant-based lysis can be easily achieved on any scale. American Chemical Society 2015-08-05 2015-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4544319/ /pubmed/26244409 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.5b06298 Text en Copyright © 2015 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Romero, Gabriela
Lilly, Jacob J.
Abraham, Nathan S.
Shin, Hainsworth Y.
Balasubramaniam, Vivek
Izumi, Tadahide
Berron, Brad J.
Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation
title Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation
title_full Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation
title_fullStr Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation
title_full_unstemmed Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation
title_short Protective Polymer Coatings for High-Throughput, High-Purity Cellular Isolation
title_sort protective polymer coatings for high-throughput, high-purity cellular isolation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4544319/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26244409
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.5b06298
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