Abstract

Cellular mechanical properties can reveal physiologically relevant characteristics in many cell types, and several groups have developed microfluidics-based platforms to perform high-throughput single-cell mechanical testing. However, prior work has performed only limited characterization of these platforms’ technical variability and reproducibility. Here, we evaluate the repeatability performance of mechano-node-pore sensing, a single-cell mechanical phenotyping platform developed by our research group. We measured the degree to which device-to-device variability and semi-manual data processing affected this platform’s measurements of single-cell mechanical properties. We demonstrated high repeatability across the entire technology pipeline even for novice users. We then compared results from identical mechano-node-pore sensing experiments performed by researchers in two different laboratories with different analytical instruments, demonstrating that the mechanical testing results from these two locations are in agreement. Our findings quantify the expectation of technical variability in mechano-node-pore sensing even in minimally experienced hands. Most importantly, we find that the repeatability performance we measured is fully sufficient for interpreting biologically relevant single-cell mechanical measurements with high confidence.

Highlights

  • As cells frequently generate and experience a variety of forces in normal physiology, their mechanical properties are an important aspect of their function

  • We show that the current mechano-node-pore sensing (NPS) analysis pipeline is capable of high degrees of consistency, high throughput, and significantly faster analysis of large data sets compared to prior, manual methods

  • In node-pore sensing (NPS), a microfluidic channel is segmented into wider “nodes” and narrower “pores.” As cells flow through the channel, unique current pulses are measured using a four-terminal measurement (Fig 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

As cells frequently generate and experience a variety of forces in normal physiology, their mechanical properties are an important aspect of their function.

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