Co-Located Conference AgendasNGS, SCA, SMA & Mass Spec: Research to Diagnostics 2016 | Point-of-Care Diagnostics & Global Health World Congress 2016 | Other Track AgendasLab-on-a-Chip and Microfluidics: Companies, Technologies and Commercialization | Lab-on-a-Chip and Microfluidics: Emerging Themes, Technologies and Applications |
Monday, 26 September 201609:00-12:00 Microfluidics and Lab-on-a-Chip (LOAC) for
Point-of-Care (POC) Diagnostics Applications: Technologies,
Applications, Research Trends [Pre-Conference Training Course]
Presented by Dr. Holger Becker, microfluidic ChipShop GmbH. Separate Registration Required for this Pre-Conference Training Course. | 12:00-14:30 Luncheon Training Course: Basic Principles in
Lab-on-a-Chip (LOAC) Technologies for the Study of Circulating
Biomarkers: Applications in Liquid Biopsies [Pre-Conference Training
Course]
Presented by Professor Steve Soper, Professor and Director, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Separate Registration Required for this Training Course. | 14:30 | Conference Registration, Conference Materials Pick-Up and Networking | | Session Title: Conference Plenary Session -- Convergence of Technologies in Microfluidics, Diagnostics and Single Cell Analysis |
| | 15:30 | | Keynote Presentation The Personalized Health Care Environment: How in vitro Diagnostics, Mobile Health and Medical Devices will Converge to Improve Health Care Alan Wright, Chief Medical Officer, Roche Diagnostics Corporation, United States of America
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| 16:00 | | Keynote Presentation Digital Microfluidics: A Platform Whose Time Has Come Aaron Wheeler, Canada Research Chair of Bioanalytical Chemistry, University of Toronto, Canada
Digital microfluidics is a fluid-handling technique in which droplets
are manipulated by electrostatic forces on an array of electrodes coated
with a hydrophobic insulator. In this talk, I will present recent
results from my group’s work with digital microfluidics, with an
emphasis on the topics covered in this unique venue. Specifically, I
will demonstrate how digital microfluidics is particularly well-suited
for Lab on a Chip applications, given its ability to automate diverse
laboratory processes on a generic, programmable platform. Likewise, I
will report on our work using digital microfluidics for Point of Care
Diagnostics and Global Health, reporting on the results of a field trial
for measles and rubella diagnostics at refugee sites in Kenya. Finally,
I will describe how digital microfluidics is emerging as a useful tool
for Single-Cell Analysis and for integration with Mass Spectrometry to
answer questions about cell heterogeneity and cell-cell communication.
Through these examples, I will make the case that digital microfluidics
is emerging as a useful new tool for the next generation of analytical
techniques, across a wide range of applications. |
| 16:30 | | Keynote Presentation Microfluidics and Sensors: New Tools for Real-Time Clinical Monitoring Martyn Boutelle, Professor of Biomedical Sensors Engineering, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
A goal for modern medicine is to protect vulnerable tissue by monitoring
the patterns of changing physical, electrical and chemical changes
taking place in tissue - ‘multimodal monitoring’. Clinicians hope such
information will allows treatments to be guided and ultimately
controlled based on the measured signals. Microfluidic lab-on-chip
devices coupled to tissue sampling using microdialysis provide an
important new way for measuring real-time chemical changes as the low
volume flow rates of microdialysis probes are ideally matched to the
length scales of microfluidic devices. Concentrations of key biomarker
molecules can then be determined continuously using either optically or
electrochemically (using amperometric, and potentiometic sensors).
Wireless devices allow analysis to take place close to the patient.
Droplet-based microfluidics, by digitizing the dialysis stream into
discrete low volume samples, both minimizes dispersion allowing very
rapid concentration changes to be measured, and allows rapid transport
of samples between patient and analysis chip. This talk will overview
successful design, optimization, automatic-calibration and use of both
continuous flow and droplet-based microfluidic analysis systems for
real-time clinical monitoring, using clinical examples from our recent
work. |
| 17:00 | | Keynote Presentation High-Performance Rapid Diagnostic Tests Bernhard Weigl, Director, Center for In-Vitro Diagnostics, Intellectual Ventures/Global Good-Bill Gates Venture Fund, United States of America
Lateral flow and similar rapid diagnostic assays (LFAs) are easy to use
and manufacture, low cost, rapid, require little or no equipment to
operate, and do not need to be refrigerated. However, they are generally
not considered to be very sensitive or able to provide a quantitative
result. Our group believes that this lack of sensitivity is not a
fundamental property of LFAs but rather a consequence of the way they
are developed, manufactured, and marketed. Historically, most lateral
flow tests were developed and optimized by relatively small
manufacturers with limited R&D capabilities and budgets, and were
generally used only for analytical targets prevalent at high
concentration in patient’s samples that were relatively easy to measure.
In contrast, our group’s mission is to develop LFA-based assays for use
in global health applications that are as sensitive as the best
conventional diagnostic assays (in some cases even better) while
retaining all their cost, simplicity, and usability advantages. |
| 17:30 | | Keynote Presentation Technologies for Personalizing Cancer Immunotherapies James Heath, Elizabeth W. Gilloon Professor of Chemistry, California Institute of Technology (CalTech), United States of America
Cancer immunotherapy, which has taken virtually all aspects of oncology
by storm over the past few years, is based upon using cellular or
molecular therapies to promote tumor cell/immune cell interactions. At
the heart of this therapy are the T cells that actually do the tumor
cell killing, and the tumor antigens that are recognized by those T
cells. Recent work has shown that neoantigens play critical roles in
many immunotherapy successes. Neoantigens are tumor antigens that are
fragments of mutated proteins expressed by the cancer cells, and contain
those point mutations. They are presented in the clefts of major
histocompatibility molecules (MHCs) by many of the cells in the tumor,
where they may be recognized by neoantigen-specific T cell populations.
In this presentation, I will discuss how various micro and
nanotechnologies are being harnessed to identify, for a given patient
which neoantigens are actively recruiting T cells into the tumor, and to
carry out a deep molecular analysis of those neoantigen-specific T
cells. I will further discuss how that information can then be
harnessed for personalized cancer immunotherapies in the form of
neoantigen-based vaccines, or engineered T cell receptor adoptive cell
transfer therapies. |
| 18:00 | | Keynote Presentation Wearable Eccrine Sweat Biosensing: Uncovering The Real Challenges That Lie Ahead Jason Heikenfeld, Professor and VP Operations, UC Office of Innovation, University of Cincinnati, United States of America
Despite the many ergonomic advantages of eccrine perspiration (sweat) compared to other biofluids (particularly in “wearable” devices), sweat remains an underrepresented source of biomarker analytes compared to the established biofluids blood, urine, and saliva. Upon closer comparison to other non-invasive biofluids, the advantages may even extend beyond ergonomics: sweat might provide superior analyte information. A number of challenges, however, have historically kept sweat from its place in the pantheon of clinical samples. These challenges include very low sample volumes (nL to µL), unknown concentration due to evaporation, filtration and dilution of large analytes, mixing of old and new sweat, and the potential for contamination from the skin surface. More recently, rapid progress in “wearable” sweat sampling and sensing devices has resolved several of the historical challenges. However, this recent progress has also been limited to high concentration analytes (µM to mM) sampled at high sweat rates (>1 nL/min/gland, e.g. athletics). Progress will be much more challenging as sweat biosensing moves towards use with sedentary users (low sweat rates or not sweating at all) and/or towards low concentration analytes (pM to nM). Fortunately, none of the remaining challenges appear to be fundamentally blocking, and scientific and engineering innovations have the opportunity to enable broader application of sweat biosensing technology. |
| 18:30 | | Keynote Presentation The Challenge in Building Phenotype Body-on-a-Chip Models for Toxicological and Efficacy Evaluations in Drug Discovery as well as Precision Medicine James Hickman, Professor, Nanoscience Technology, Chemistry, Biomolecular Science and Electrical Engineering, University of Central Florida; Chief Scientist, Hesperos, United States of America
The utilization of human-on-a-chip or body-on-a-chip systems for toxicology and efficacy that ultimately should lead to personalized, precision medicine has been a topic that has received much attention recently. Key characteristic needed for these systems are the ability for organ-to-organ communication in a serum-free recirculating medium and incorporation of induced pluripotent stem cells that allow for understanding genetic variation as well as to construct systems utilizing stem cells from diseased patients and also from individuals. Additional characteristics that have been discussed are functional readouts that would enable non-invasive monitoring of organ health and viability for chronic studies that now are only possible in animals or humans at this time. In addition, in order to achieve wide spread adoption of these technologies they should also be low cost, easy to use and reconfigurable to allow flexibility for platforms to be examined with small variation. Our group, in collaboration with Dr. Michael Shuler from Cornell University, has been constructing these systems with up to 6 organs and have demonstrated long-term (>28 days) evaluation of drugs and compounds, that have shown similar response to results seen from clinical data or reports in the literature. We have accomplished the construction of these systems utilizing mostly 2D systems in serum-free medium with functional readouts that employs a pumpless platform that enables ease of use of these assays. Our group’s ability to control the interface between the biological and non-biological components in these systems has enabled the straightforward integration of multiple cell types in the same platform. Results with the functional multi-organ systems will be presented as well as results of five workshops held at NIH to explore what is needed for validation and qualification of these systems by the FDA and EMA. |
| 19:00 | Conference Opening Reception with Beer, Wine and a Light Dinner Sponsored by Veryst Engineering, LLC | 20:00 - 22:00 Dinner Training Course: Microfluidics for 3D-Printing
and Biofabrication: Technologies and Applications
- Presented by Professor Albert Folch, University of Washington
- Dinner will be served
- Separate Registration Required for this Training Course
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Tuesday, 27 September 201607:45 | Conference Registration, Conference Materials Pick-Up, Morning Coffee and Breakfast Pastries in the Exhibit Hall | | Session Title: Emerging Themes & Technology Trends in the Microfluidics and Lab-on-a-Chip Space, circa 2016 |
| | 09:00 | | Keynote Presentation Centrifugal Microfluidics for Biomedical Applications Yoon-Kyoung Cho, Professor, Biomedical Engineering, Ulsan National Institute of Science & Technology; Group leader, IBS; FRSC, Fellow of Royal Society of Chemistry, Korea South
In this presentation, we will discuss our on-going research on
“Lab-on-a-disc”, which applies centrifugal force to pump fluid for
biochemical analysis. It is advantageous because of the capability to
integrate and automate the analysis protocols into a disc-shaped device
with simple, size-reduced, and cost-efficient instrumentation. We report
various examples of fully integrated "lab-on-a-disc" for biomedical
applications such as pathogen specific DNA extraction to test infectious
diseases, multiplex enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and
isolation and analysis of circulating tumor cells starting from whole
blood. Integration with centrifugal microfluidic technology allows us
precise control of fluids while also reducing the expensive reagent
consumption, the required analysis time and possible handling errors. We
believe the presented result will not only improve the performance of
the point-of-care-diagnostic devices but also potentially have great
impact on global healthcare. |
| 09:30 | Centrifugal Step Emulsification Allows Miniaturized Digital Droplet-RPA, -LAMP and -PCR on the Centrifugal Microfluidic Platform Felix von Stetten, Associate Director, Hahn-Schickard, Germany
A novel unit operation designated centrifugal step emulsification
enables miniaturization of digital amplification protocols. Droplet
generation, DNA-amplification and fluorescence detection was all
performed within one single cavity. Results for absolute quantification
of DNA by digital droplet-RPA, -LAMP and -PCR were in good agreement
with those obtained by a commercial dPCR system. | 10:00 | | Keynote Presentation A Billion-Droplet AC Electrospray Digital PCR Platform for Large-Dynamic Range Nucleic Acid Quantification Hsueh-Chia Chang, Bayer Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Interim Chief Technology Officer, Aopia Biosciences, United States of America
An AC-electrospray technology is shown to be able to generate 1 billion
femto-liter (micron diameter) aqueous drops in immiscible silicone oil
in less than 20 minutes. Unlike DC sprays, which tend to suffer from
dielectric breakdown in liquid, and droplet generation technologies
based on hydrodynamic shear, which can only generate pico-liter drops,
we have shown that a properly tuned AC field can entrain low-mobility
anions at a meniscus and the Coulombic repulsion among such entrained
ions can deform the meniscus into unique 11 degree AC cones that are
quite distinct from and much stable than DC cones (Phys Rev Lett, 101,
204501(2008); 109, 224301(2012); LabChip, 15, 1656(2015)). The sharper
AC cones can generate 1 million femto-liter drops per second. The
larger drop number and concentration (nM) allow us to get significantly
better accuracy (without using Poisson statistics), dynamic range (8
decades) and reduction of inhibition and interfering effects in
heterogeneous media. We have fabricated an integrated AC electrospray
chip with PCR and imaging modules and have favorably compared the
performance of this new droplet digital PCR platform against qPCR. The
new AC droplet digital PCR platform is, however, a low-cost turn-key
technology that requires no or minimum sample pretreatment. |
| 10:30 | Coffee Break and Networking in the Exhibit Hall: Visit Exhibitors and Poster Viewing | 11:15 | Sensors and Microfluidics – Challenges and Solutions for System Integration Holger Becker, Chief Scientific Officer, Microfluidic ChipShop GmbH, Germany
| 11:45 | | Keynote Presentation Cost-Effective Microfluidic Platform for Point-of-Care Diagnostics and Various Life-Science Applications Alexander Govyadinov, Senior Technologist, HP Incorporated, United States of America
Recently, there is a lot of interest in microfluidic lab-on-a chip
application for life science, forensic, point-of-care,
molecular-diagnostic, other in-vitro-diagnostic, organs-on-a-chip,
environmental and multiple others applications. Different scientific and
commercial organizations explore a multitude of material sets and
operational principles to forge microfluidic devices. Simultaneously,
inkjet industry utilizes well established materials and principles of
operation for complicated microfluidic systems developed for precision
dispensing and manipulation of droplets with pico-liter accuracy on a
massively parallel scale. The presentation describes our recent progress
of low cost microfluidic platform development utilizing materials and
processes developed for low-cost thermal inkjet business. The concept
repurposes well established inkjet processes, microfluidic components
and jetting elements for pumping, mixing, valving, fluid transport,
sensing and other critical functions of complex integrated microfluidic
systems. This presentation describes operating principles of
microfluidic elements, examples of their integration in functional
devices and discusses inkjet technology potential for broad range of
microfluidic applications. |
| 12:15 | Networking Lunch in the Exhibit Hall: Visit Exhibitors and Poster Viewing | | Session Title: 3D-Printing in the Microfluidics Space |
| | 14:00 | Bioanalytical Applications of Modular 3D Microfluidic Systems Noah Malmstadt, Professor, Mork Family Dept. of Chemical Engineering & Materials Science, University of Southern California, United States of America
Assembly of microfluidic systems from modular 3D-printed components
enables an innovative and powerful design workflow. While traditional
fabrication approaches require design and fabrication of monolithic
integrated devices, a modular approach allows for design and
optimization of individual system elements. Final system design then
becomes a simple iterative process based on assembling these elements by
hand. An additional strength of a 3D-printed modular approach is the
capacity to seamlessly integrate off-the-shelf electromechanical
components into the modules. We have recently demonstrated integration
of thermal sensors, optical sensors, and electromagnets into 3D-printed
fluidic modules. These integrated components facilitate an array of
tasks including flow rate detection, calorimetry, droplet counting,
bioassay readout, and bead-based separations. Together with strategies
for controlling the surface chemistry of 3D-printed parts and
implementing efficient in-line mixing, these active modules form the
foundation for designing and building complex integrated bioanalytical
systems. | 14:30 | | Keynote Presentation The Art of 3D-Printing Biocompatible Microfluidics Albert Folch, Professor of Bioengineering, University of Washington, United States of America
The vast majority of microfluidic systems are presently built by
replica-molding and bonding in elastomers (such as poly(dimethyl
siloxane) (PDMS)) or in thermoplastics (such as poly(methyl
methacrylate) (PMMA) or poly-styrene (PS)). However, biologists and
clinicians typically do not have access to microfluidic technology
because they do not have the engineering expertise or equipment required
to fabricate and/or operate microfluidic devices. Furthermore, the
present commercialization path for microfluidic devices is usually
restricted to high-volume applications in order to recover the large
investment needed to develop the plastic molding processes. We are
developing microfluidic devices through stereolithography, a form of 3D
printing, in order to make microfluidic technology readily available via
the web to biomedical scientists. Most available SL resins do not have
all the favorable physicochemical properties of the above-named plastics
(e.g., biocompatibility, transparency, elasticity, and gas
permeability), so the performance of SL-printed devices is still
inferior to that of equivalent PDMS devices. Inspired by the success of
hydrogel PEG-DA biocompatibility, we have developed microfluidic devices
by SL in resins that share all the advantageous attributes of PDMS and
thermoplastics so that we can 3D-print designs with comparable
performance and biocompatibility to those that are presently molded. |
| 15:00 | 3D Printing Hydrogel-based Microfluidic Devices and Vascularized Tissue Constructs Luiz Bertassoni, Associate Professor, Biomaterials and Biomechanics, School of Dentistry, Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research, Knight Cancer Institute, Oregon Health & Sciences University, United States of America
Fabrication of three-dimensional tissues with controlled
micro-architectures has been shown to enhance tissue functionality. 3D
printing can be used to precisely position cells and cell-laden
materials to generate controlled tissue architectures. Therefore, it
represents an exciting alternative for organ fabrication. Our group has
been interested in developing innovative printing-based technologies to
improve our ability to regenerate tissues with improved function, as
well as to engineer hydrogel based microfluidic devices. In this
seminar, we will present novel printing-based methods to fabricate
vascularized tissue constructs, and 3D printed valved hydrogel based
microfluidic devices that can be gated to multiple configurations for
various microfluidics applications. The use of these technologies in
various regenerative applications will be discussed. | 15:30 | Coffee Break and Networking: Visit Exhibitors and Poster Viewing | | STRATEC Consumables Symposium on Innovations in Microfluidics and Lab-on-a-Chip and their Impact on Life Sciences and Diagnostics | Session Sponsors |
| | 16:00 | Introduction to the STRATEC Consumables Symposium and Topics Addressed in 2016 | 16:15 | | Keynote Presentation Microfluidic Printing: From Combinatorial Drug Screening to Artificial Cell Assaying Tingrui Pan, Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California-Davis, United States of America
Microfluidic impact printing has been recently introduced, benefiting
from the nature of simple device architecture, low cost,
non-contamination, scalable multiplexability and high throughput. In
this talk, we will review this novel microfluidic-based droplet
generation platform, utilizing modular microfluidic cartridges and
expandable combinatorial printing capacity controlled by plug-and-play
multiplexed actuators. Such a customizable microfluidic printing system
allows for ultrafine control of the droplet volume from picoliters
(~10pL) to nanoliters (~100nL), a 10,000 fold variation. The high
flexibility of droplet manipulations can be simply achieved by
controlling the magnitude of actuation (e.g., driving voltage) and the
waveform shape of actuation pulses, in addition to nozzle size
restrictions. Detailed printing characterizations on these parameters
have been conducted consecutively. A multichannel impact printing system
has been prototyped and demonstrated to provide the functions of
single-droplet jetting and droplet multiplexing as well as concentration
gradient generation. Moreover, several enabling chemical and biological
assays have been implemented and validated on this highly automated and
flexible printing platform. In brief, the microfluidic impact printing
system could be of potential value to establishing multiplexed droplet
assays for high-throughput life science researchers. |
| 16:35 | | Keynote Presentation Nanopore Sequencing for Real-Time Pathogen Identification Kamlesh Patel, R&D Advanced System Engineering and Deployment Manager, Sandia National Laboratories, United States of America
As recent outbreaks have shown, effective global health response to
emergent infectious disease requires a rapidly deployable, universal
diagnostic capability. We will present our ongoing work to develop a
fieldable device for universal bacterial pathogen characterization based
on nanopore DNA sequencing. Our approach leverages synthetic
biofunctionalized nanopore structures to sense each nucleotide. We aim
to create a man-portable platform by combining nanopore sequencing with
advance microfluidic-based sample preparation methods for an
amplification-free, universal sample prep to accomplish multiplexed,
broad-spectrum pathogen and gene identification. |
| 16:55 | | Keynote Presentation Polymer-based Nanosensors using Flight-Time Identification of Mononucleotides for Single-Molecule Sequencing Steve Soper, Foundation Distinguished Professor, Director, Center of BioModular Multi-Scale System for Precision Medicine, The University of Kansas, United States of America
We are generating a single-molecule DNA sequencing platform that can
acquire sequencing information with high accuracy. The technology
employs high density arrays of nanosensors that read the identity of
individual mononucleotides from their characteristic flight-time through
a 2-dimensional (2D) nanochannel (~20 nm in width and depth; >100 µm
in length) fabricated in a thermoplastic via nano-imprinting (NIL). The
mononucleotides are generated from an intact DNA fragment using a
highly processive exonuclease, which is covalently anchored to a plastic
solid support contained within a bioreactor that sequentially feeds
mononucleotides into the 2D nanochannel. The identity of the
mononucleotides is deduced from a molecular-dependent flight-time
through the 2D nanochannel. The flight time is read in a label-less
fashion by measuring current transients induced a single mononucleotide
when it travels through a constriction with molecular dimensions (<10
nm in diameter) that are poised at the input/output ends of the flight
tube. In this presentation, our efforts on building these polymer
nanosensors using NIL in thermoplastics will be discussed and the
detection of single molecules using electrical transduction with their
identity deduced from the associated flight time provided. Finally,
information on the manipulation of single DNA molecules using
nanofluidic circuits will be discussed that takes advantage of forming
unique nano-scale features to shape electric fields for DNA manipulation
and serves as the functional basis of the nanosensing platform. |
| 17:15 | | Keynote Presentation Rapid and Ultra-sensitive Diagnostics Using Digital Detection Weian Zhao, Associate Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California-Irvine, United States of America
We will present our most recent droplet based digital detection
platforms for rapid and sensitive detections, which could find potential
applications at the point-of-care (POC). |
| 17:35 | | Keynote Presentation Fractionation and Analysis of Nuclear versus Cytoplasmic Nucleic Acids from Single Cells Juan Santiago, Charles Lee Powell Foundation Professor, Stanford University, United States of America
Single cell analyses (SCA) have become powerful tools in the study
heterogeneous cell populations such as tumors and developing embryos.
However, fractionating and analyzing nuclear versus cytoplasmic
fractions of nucleic acids remains a challenge as these fractions easily
cross-contaminate. We present a novel microfluidic system that can
fractionate and deliver nucleic acid (NA) fractions from the nucleus
(nNA) versus the cytoplasm (cNA) from single cells to independent
downstream analyses. Our technique leverages a selective electrical
lysis which disrupts the cell’s (outer) cytoplasmic membrane, while
leaving the nucleus relatively intact. We selectively extract, purify,
and preconcentrate cNA using isotachophoresis (ITP). The ITP-focused
cNA and nNA-containing nucleus are separated by ITP and fractionated at a
bifurcation downstream and then extracted for off chip analyses. We
will present example applications of this fractionation including qPCR
and next generation sequencing (NGS) analyses of cNA vs. nNA. This will
include preliminary NGS analyses of nuclear vs. cytoplasmic RNA
fractions to analyze gene expression and splicing. We hypothesize that
the robust and precise nature of our electric field control is amenable
to further automation to increase throughput while removing manuals
steps. |
| 17:55 | | Keynote Presentation Chip-Scale Microfluidic Physiological Circulation Systems Abraham Lee, Chancellor’s Professor, Biomedical Engineering & Director, Center for Advanced Design & Manufacturing of Integrated Microfluidics, University of California-Irvine, United States of America
There has been a recent surge in the development of microphysiological systems and organ-on-a-chip for drug screening and regenerative medicine. Over the years, drug screening has mostly been carried out on 2D monolayers in well plates and the drugs are not delivered through blood vessels as in vivo treatments. Through the advancement of microfluidics technologies, we have enabled the automation of biological fluids delivery through physiological vasculature networks that mimic the physiological circulation of the human body. The critical bottleneck is to engineer the microenvironment for the formation of vascularized 3D tissues and to also pump and perfuse the tissue vascular network for on-chip microcirculation. This in vitro model system can be used to screen cancer drugs by mimicking the delivery of the drugs through capillary blood vessels. On the other hand, microfluidics play an important role in the recent advances in liquid biopsy and the ability to specifically isolate and capture rare cells such as circulating tumor cells. These two technologies may go hand-in-hand to connect in vitro screening to in vivo screening with great potential in the development of personalized medicine.
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| 18:15 | Close of STRATEC Consumables Symposium | 18:30 | Cocktail Reception for All Conference Attendees: Enjoy Beer, Wine, Appetizers and Network with Fellow Delegates, Speakers, Exhibitors in the Exhibit Hall and View Posters Sponsored by STRATEC Consumables GmbH | 20:00 | Close of Day 2 of the Conference. Continue Networking in Downtown San Diego (Trolleys to the City are Available Right Behind the Conference Venue). | 20:00 - 22:00 Dinner Training Course Organ-on-a-Chip: Technologies, Applications and Commercial Opportunities
Presented by:
Professor Michael Shuler, Samuel B. Eckert Professor of Engineering, Cornell University; President & CEO, Hesperos, Inc.
Professor James Hickman, Professor, University of Central Florida; Chief Scientist, Hesperos, Inc.
- September 27, 2016 from 20:00-22:00
- Dinner will be served
- Separate Registration Required
|
Wednesday, 28 September 201607:00 | Morning Coffee, Breakfast Pastries and Networking in the Exhibit Hall | | Session Title: From Technologies to Utility -- Applications of Microfluidics/LOAC in Life Sciences and Beyond |
| | 08:00 | Step by Step Fabrication of Biomaterials based on Cell Adhesion Control Kennedy Okeyo, Senior Lecturer, Institute for Frontier Life and Medical Sciences, Kyoto University, Japan
On-chip fabrication of biomaterials such as cell sheets based on
self-assembly organization of cells into tissues continues to attract
attention due to potential applications in regenerative medicine as well
as in the development of in vitro models for drug screening. We
recently developed a technique for step-by-step fabrication of cell
sheets based on adhesion control. It involves minimization of
cell-substrate interaction to initiate self-assembly of cells, not into
spheroids, but into planar cell sheets which can be then overlaid or
stacked into 3D tissue models. For cell adhesion minimization, we
developed a mesh culture system where cells are seeded and grown on
suspended ultra-thin (~2µm thick) mesh scaffolds consisting of
considerably large apertures (exceeding 100 µm in size) and thin mesh
lines (3-5 µm in width). | 08:30 | 3D Microfluidic Mixer for Rapid Smartphone-based Diagnosis of Anemia Mei He, Assistant Professor, University of Kansas and Chief Science Officer, Clara Biotech, United States of America
Clinical diagnosis requiring a central facility and site visits can be
burdensome for patients in resource-limited or rural areas. Therefore,
development of a low-cost microfluidic chip that utilizes smartphone
data collection and transmission would beneficially enable disease
self-management and point-of-care diagnosis. We demonstrated 3D
simulation-guided printing for fabricating micro-, millifluidic mixers,
which allows rapid study and testing of various geometries in
lab-on-a-chip devices. Combined with smartphone, a 3D printed
microfluidic mixer for auto-mixing of reagents via capillary force has
been implemented, for measuring hemoglobin levels in finger-prick blood.
Self-diagnosis of anemia has been successfully demonstrated using
smartphone detection, showing consistent results with clinical
measurements. Capable of 3D fabrication flexibility and smartphone
compatibility, this work presents a novel diagnostic strategy for
advancing personalized medicine and disease management. | 09:00 | Technology Spotlight: High-Sensitivity, Cost-Effective Nanophotonic Biosensor Substrates Arash Farhang, Optics Scientist, MOXTEK, Inc.
Numerous publications demonstrate that nanophotonic substrates offer the
extraordinary surface sensitivity that enables many biosensing
applications. Thus far colloidal-nanoparticle-based arrays and thin
metallic films are the only such truly large scale substrates that have
been available commercially. Moxtek has developed nanophotonic
technologies and cost-effective volume production capabilities that
enable and improve numerous biosensor applications. This technology
greatly enhances fluorescence and label-free assay sensitivity through
the utilization of surface plasmon, guided-mode, and gap-mode
resonances. Such heightened sensitivity enables significantly-lower
detection limits in molecular/chemical detection, microarrays, and other
bioassay technologies, applications. These in turn open the doors to
additional markets such as medical/point-of-care diagnostics, forensic
testing, environmental monitoring, and food safety. Theoretical and
measured data on the performance of these nanophotonic technologies,
possible applications, and an overview of the available developmental
and commercial manufacturing capabilities will be presented. | 09:30 | | Keynote Presentation Biological Imaging Using Microfluidics and Electrochemistry Charles Henry, Professor and Chair, Colorado State University, United States of America
Chemical gradients drive many processes in biology, ranging from nerve
signal transduction to ovulation to cancer metastasis. At present,
microscopy is the primary tool used to understand these gradients by
imaging both the gradients and the resulting cell motion. Microscopy has
provided many important breakthroughs in our understanding of
fundamental biology, but is limited due to the need to incorporate
fluorescent molecules into biological systems through either labeling or
genetic manipulations. To better understand some processes, there is a
need to develop tools that can measure chemical gradient formation in
biological systems that do not require fluorescent modification of the
targets, can be multiplexed to measure more than one molecule, and are
compatible with a variety of biological sample types, including in vitro
cell cultures and ex vivo tissue slices. In response to this need, we
have developed a high-density electrode array containing 8,192
individual electrodes to image release of electrochemically active
metabolites like nitric oxide and norepinephrine from live tissue
slices. The electrode array has a resolution of 30 µm and covers and
area of 2 mm by 2 mm, easily large enough to image release of
neurotransmitters across an ex vivo tissue slice from a mouse model. In
this talk, electrochemical characterization of this system will be
discussed first using simple chemical models. Then use of the system in
combination with microfluidics, for imaging spatiotemporal resolution of
neurotransmitter release at the organ scale will be presented. Use of
microfluidics to deliver stimulants that induce changes in release
profile will be shown. |
| 10:00 | Technology Spotlight: Negotiating Your Way into an Assay: Specificity has Tolerances Tom Taccini, Engineering Development Team Lead, Wi, Inc.
| 10:30 | Coffee Break and Networking in the Exhibit Hall: Visit Exhibitors and Poster Viewing | 11:15 | Applications of Fully Integrated Active and Passive Flow Control in the Organ-on-Chip, Analytical and Diagnostics Field Marko Blom, Chief Technical Officer, Micronit Microtechnologies, Netherlands
We will present various applications and examples in the organ-on-chip,
analytical and diagnostics field relying on fully integrated active and
passive, capillary driven flow control. Active valving fabrication
strategies will be shown which do not require adhesives for the
integration of materials relevant to the above mentioned fields. The
applications will range from accurate dosing, distribution and
dispensing for cell culturing and Organ-On-Chip (OOC) applications to
examples of sequential capillary flow in polymeric devices controlled by
low-power electrical triggers realized using integrated electrodes.
Specifically for the OOC field we have developed scalable
Design-For-Manufacturability (DFM) concepts for such OOC applications,
varying from resealable devices to fully integrated microtiter plate
format culturing tools. The concepts are tested and validated in the
field by end-users. Here, we demonstrate their use and applicability as
versatile, flexible and enabling R&D tools for prototyping and
(further) development of OOC applications. | 11:45 | Technology Spotlight: Modeling and Simulation of Microfluidic Organ-on-Chip Devices Matthew Hancock, Managing Engineer, Veryst Engineering, LLC
Modeling and simulation are key components of the engineering
development process, providing a rational, systematic method to engineer
and optimize products and dramatically accelerate the development cycle
over a pure intuition-driven, empirical testing approach. Modeling and
simulation help to identify key parameters related to product
performance (“what to try”) as well as insignificant parameters or
conditions related to poor outcomes (“what not to try”). For
microfluidic organ-on-chip devices, modeling and simulation can inform
the design and integration of common components such as micropumps,
manifolds, and channel networks. Modeling and simulation may also be
used to estimate a range of processes occurring within the fluid bulk
and near cells, including shear stresses, transport of nutrients and
waste, chemical reactions, heat transfer, and surface tension &
wetting effects. I will discuss how an array of modeling tools such as
scaling arguments, analytical formulas, and finite element simulations
may be leveraged to address these microfluidic organ-on-chip device
development issues. | 12:15 | Networking Lunch in the Exhibit Hall: Visit Exhibitors and Poster Viewing | | Session Title: Technology Advances in Microfluidics Drives Development of New Utility |
| | 13:30 | | Keynote Presentation Human “Body-on-a-Chip” Devices as Tool to Improve Drug Development Michael Shuler, Samuel B. Eckert Professor of Engineering, Cornell University, President Hesperos, Inc., United States of America
Alternatives or supplements to the use of animals in preclinical drug
development that better mimic human response should reduce costs and
increase the number of FDA approved drugs at the end of clinical trials.
We have constructed micro-physiological (or “Body-on-a-Chip”) devices
constructed from a combination of human tissue engineered constructs,
micro-fabricated devices and physiologically based pharmacokinetic
(PBPK) models. These human surrogates are constructed on a low cost,
robust “pumpless” platform. In addition to measuring viability and
metabolic responses, we can measure functional outputs such as
electrical activity and force generation using integrated sensors (in
collaboration with J. Hickman, University of Central Florida). We will
focus our discussion on development of key organ modules and their
integration with each other to form a model of the human body. |
| 14:00 | Inertial Focusing in Triangular Microchannels for Flow Cytometry Ian Papautsky, Richard and Loan Hill Professor of Bioengineering, Co-Director, NSF Center for Advanced Design & Manufacturing of Integrated Microfluidics, University of Illinois at Chicago, United States of America
This work presents a microfluidic device that takes advantage of
asymmetric velocity profile in a low aspect ratio triangular
microchannel to focus cells and microbeads into a single position with
high efficiency, and without the need for secondary flow, sheath flow or
external forces. | 14:30 | Free-Surface Microfluidics and SERS for High Performance Sample Capture and Analysis Carl Meinhart, Professor, University of California-Santa Barbara, United States of America
Nearly all microfluidic devices to date consist of some type of
fully-enclosed microfluidic channel. The concept of ‘free-surface’
microfluidics has been pioneered at UCSB during the past several years,
where at least one surface of the microchannel is exposed to the
surrounding air. Surface tension is a dominating force at the micron
scale, which can be used to control effectively fluid motion. There are a
number of distinct advantages to the free surface microfluidic
architecture. For example, the free surface provides a highly effective
mechanism for capturing certain low-density vapor molecules. This
mechanism is a key component (in combination with surface-enhanced Raman
spectroscopy, i.e. SERS) of a novel explosives vapor detection
platform, which is capable of sub part-per-billion sensitivity with high
specificity. | 15:00 | Bipolar Electrode Coupling of Nanoscale Electron Transfer Reactions to Remote Chromogenic and Luminogenic Reporter Reactions Paul Bohn, Arthur J. Schmitt Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Notre Dame, United States of America
The combination of fluorescence and absorption spectroscopy with
electrochemistry presents new avenues for the study of redox reactions,
with potential for enhanced throughput, sensitivity, and spatial
resolution. Here we present a novel configuration for coupling high
sensitivity voltammetric measurements implemented in nanoscale
architectures - such as nanopore-confined recessed ring-disk electrode
arrays - with remote electrochemically-triggered chromogenic and
fluorigenic reporter reactions. Coupling is mediated by a mm-scale
bipolar electrode which communicates the local solution potential in the
analyte-measuring portion of the device to an opposing chromogenic or
fluorigenic reporter reaction in a remote location. Oxidation
(reduction) of reversible analytes at the disk working electrode is
accompanied by reduction (oxidation) on the nanopore portion of the
bipolar electrode and then monitored by the accompanying oxidation of
the reporter to produce a change in color or luminescence. The remote
end of the bipolar electrode is placed in a cell far from the nanopore
ring-disk array so that highly efficient reporter measurements can be
carried out conveniently against low intrinsic backgrounds. The
combination of bipolar eletrodes with luminescence in the
dihydroresorufin/resorufin system has been used to study in situ
generation of H2O2 in electrokinetic flow and for
analytical determinations down to pM limits of detection. Applications
of chromogenic reporter reactions for point-of-care (POC) use will also
be described. | 15:30 | Plasmonic-Enhanced Single-Molecule Detection Steve Blair, Professor, University of Utah, United States of America
The next generation of molecular diagnostics tools are targeted to have
single molecule sensitivity. Plasmonic-enhanced fluorescence can be a
key enabling factor in achieving this goal. Large-scale arrays of
plasmonic structures meet the requirements of enhanced
signal-to-background in fluorescence detection, along with compatibility
with existing instrumentation and surface chemistry. Fluorescence
enhancement results from a combination of plasmonic mediated excitation
and emission enhancement. Even though molecules are confined within a
plasmonic structure, the spectral region of enhancement depends strongly
on the metal. As such, have also been working with structures in Al,
which is mass-production friendly and provides balanced enhancement
throughout the visible spectrum, opening up a wider range of
applications. However, new chemical passivation strategies need to be
devised due to the native oxide of Al. Tuning of the relative
enhancements can be accomplished by adjusting the shape of the plasmonic
structures, opening up the UV spectral range where the native
fluorescence of biomolecules can be accessed. | 16:00 | Proton Mobility in Cell-like Environments Ines Hauner, Researcher, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Recent experiments reveal the presence of strong spatial heterogeneities of the intracellular proton concentration even in the absence of physical diffusion barriers such as biological membranes. This is, however, at odds with the well established ultrafast Grotthus mechanism for proton diffusion. We present first measurements of proton mobility in cell-like environments using Microfluidic Fluorescence Microscopy and Time-Resolved Femtosecond IR Spectroscopy. We find that the proton mobility can be several orders of magnitude slower because cytosolic components retard diffusion at physiological, i.e. cell mimicking conditions. On the other hand, the water reorientation dynamics that plays a preponderant role for the Grotthus mechanism is hardly changed. This allows us to conclude that the deceleration of proton diffusion is primarily due to the proton carrying capacity of weak acids and bases as well as to effects resulting from the presence of biological macromolecules such as globular proteins. | 16:30 | Close of Conference Track. |
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