| Micro-fluidic
Bio-chips for the Detection of Microorganisms 1.
Microfluidic BioChips for the Electronic Detection of Bacterial
Metabolism
Haibo Li, Yi-Shao Liu, Kidong Park, Rashid Bashir, School of Electrical
and
Computer Engineering
T. Huang, M.
Ladisch, Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering
T. Geng, A.
Bhunia, Department of Food Sciences
Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907
The development
of techniques to process and detect bio-species using micro-fabricated
systems will accelerate the practical applications of chip-based
assays, with the ultimate goal of carrying out all of the operations
on a chip, using minute sample volumes. In the first project described,
the design and fabrication of micro-fluidic chips is being studied
for affinity-based detection of biological species. The chip consists
of a series of cavities or wells, which are anisotropically etched
in a silicon wafer, connected by etched channels and sealed with
a glass cover. The cavities have sizes that range from 80umx 80um
to 530umx 850um and the channels have widths between 20um and 100um,
which are all etched to a depth of 10um. Platinum electrodes are
defined at the bottom of the cavities, whose surface is oxidized,
and serve as the primary sensing and reaction elements when coated
with receptors, antibodies, enzymes, etc. A spin-on-glass is used
as an intermediate layer to bond the glass cover to the oxide-covered
chip. The total fluidic path volume in the device is on the order
of 30nl. Flow fields in the closed chip were mapped by particle
image velocimetry. Electrical impedance measurements of suspensions
of the live microorganism, Listeria innocua, injected into the chip
demonstrate an easy method for detecting the viability of a few
bacterial cells. By-products of the bacterial metabolism modify
the ionic strength of a low conductivity suspension medium, significantly
altering its electrical characteristics.
The work is
now directed towards a recently funded project by USDA aimed at
detection of Pathogenic Listeria in food products. |
SEM
Micrographs of micro-fluidic biochips
References:
[1] A. K. Bhunia,
Z. W. Jaradat, K. Naschansky, M. Shroyer, M. Morgan, R. Gomez, R.
Bashir, and M. Ladisch, "Impedance spectroscopy and biochip
sensor for detection of Listeria monocytogenes", SPIE Proceedings,
Vol 4206-05, Nov 5-8, Boston, Mass. 2000.
[2] R. Bashir,
R. Gomez, A. Sarikaya, M. Ladisch, J. Sturgis, and J. P. Robinson,
“Adsorption of Avidin on Micro-Fabricated Surfaces for Protein
Biochip Applications”, Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Volume
73, Issue 4, 2001, pp. 324-328.
[3] R. Gomez,
R. Bashir, T. Geng, A. Bhunia, M. Ladisch, H. Apple, S. Wereley,
“Micro-Fluidic Bochip for Impedance Spectroscopy of Biological
Species”, Biomedical Micro-Devices, vol. 3, no. 3, September
14th, 2001, p. 201-209.
[4] Rafael Gomez,
Rashid Bashir, Arun K. Bhunia, Michael R. Ladisch, “Microfabricated
device for impedance-based detection of bacterial metabolism”,
Spring MRS 2002. San Francisco, CA.
[5] Rafael Gómez,
Rashid Bashir, Arun K. Bhunia, "Microscale Electronic Detection
of Bacterial Metabolism", Sensors & Actuators B-Chemical.
v 86 n 2-3 Sep 20 2002. p 198-208
Funded by USDA
through the Food Safety Engineering
Center at Purdue.
project
web page at the center site.
2. Dielectrophoretic
Characterization and Separation of Microorganisms in Micro-fabricated
Device with Inter-digitated Electrodes
Haibo Li, D.
Akin, Rashid Bashir, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Key Words: electrophoresis; dielectrophoresis; cell separation;
micro-interdigitated electrodes; Listeria; BioMEMS.
This work focuses
on the electrophoretic and dielectrophoretic separation of live
and heat-killed Listeria innocua cells on a microfabricated device
with interdigitated electrodes. ANSYS and Mathematica are being
used to perform the simulation of the electrical field and the dielectrophoretic
force between the electrodes numerically and analytically respectively.
Live and dead bacteria cells are stained with fluorescent dye (Live/DeadÒ
BacLightTM Bacterial Viability Kit from Molecular Probes Corp.)
and their electrophoretic and dielectrophoretic behaviors are observed
under fluorescence microscope. Both DC and AC signals are applied
to the intedigitated electrodes in the experiments. The frequency
dependence of the applied AC voltage on the dielectrophoresis of
the cells is studied with particular interest. Preliminarily results
show the feasibility of using these methods to separate live and
dead cells, as well as different microorganisms according to the
different frequency dependences of their dielectric properties.
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Optical
picture of interdigitated electrodes. Live and dead cells are separated
at Vpp=1V, Frequency=50KHz, in DI water, most live cells (green)
collect at the edges of the electrodes (positive DEP), while most
dead cells (red) collect at the centers (negative DEP)
Funded by USDA
[1] H. Li, R.
Bashir, “Dielectrophoretic Separation Of Live And Heat-Treated
Cells Of Listeria On Microfabricated Devices With Interdigitated
Electrodes”, Spring MRS 2002. San Francisco, CA.
[2] Haibo Li,
Rashid Bashir, “Dielectrophoretic separation and manipulation
of live and heat-treated cells of Listeria on microfabricated devices
with interdigitated electrodes”, Sensors & Actuators B-Chemical.
v 86 n 2-3 Sep 20 2002. p 215-221
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