Abstract

Microfluidic biochip techniques are prominently replacing conventional biochemical analyzers by the integration of all functions necessary for biochemical analysis using microfluidics. The microfluidics of droplets offer exquisite control over the size of microliter samples to satisfy the requirements of embryo culture, which might involve a size ranging from picoliter to nanoliter. Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) is the mainstream material for the fabrication of microfluidic devices due to its excellent biocompatibility and simplicity of fabrication. Herein, we developed a microfluidic biomedical chip on a PDMS substrate that integrated four key functions—generation of a droplet of an emulsion, sorting, expansion and restoration, which were employed in a mouse embryo system to assess reproductive medicine. The main channel of the designed chip had width of 1200 μm and height of 500 μm. The designed microfluidic chips possessed six sections—cleaved into three inlets and three outlets—to study the key functions with five-day embryo culture. The control part of the experiment was conducted with polystyrene (PS) beads (100 μm), the same size as the murine embryos, for the purpose of testing. The outcomes of our work illustrate that the rate of success of the static droplet culture group (87.5%) is only slightly less than that of a conventional group (95%). It clearly demonstrates that a droplet-based microfluidic system can produce a droplet in a volume range from picoliter to nanoliter.

Highlights

  • Microfluidic chips have attracted much attention from both academia and industry, which has led to their rapid development in the field of medical diagnostics

  • A droplet-based microfluidic system produces a droplet of volume typically ranging from picolitre [1,2] to nanolitre [3,4]

  • We developed a microfluidic chip on a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) substrate to upgrade the volume of droplets from picolitre and nanolitre to microlitre for culturing mouse embryos

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Summary

Introduction

Microfluidic chips have attracted much attention from both academia and industry, which has led to their rapid development in the field of medical diagnostics. Microfluidics involve a volume of fluid in the range of microlitre to picolitre, and demonstrate many advantages such as rapid mass delivery and heat transfer, and diminished use of reagents and generation of waste. A droplet-based microfluidic system produces a droplet of volume typically ranging from picolitre [1,2] to nanolitre [3,4]. There are two main methods to control the direction or motion of a droplet: one uses a pneumatic valve and the other one employs light waves of a specific wavelength to impinge on a droplet in the channel [5,6,7,8]. The particle-encapsulated droplet can be determined, while droplets absorb the reflected light of a particular spectral wavelength

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