Droplet-based Microfluidics for Cancer Research
Valérie Taly, CNRS Research Director, Group Leader and Professor, Université Paris Cité
Droplet-based microfluidics has led to the development of highly
powerful tools with great potential in High-Throughput Screening where
individual assays are compartmentalized within aqueous droplets acting
as independent microreactors. Thanks to the combination of a decrease of
assay volume and an increase of throughput, this technology goes beyond
the capacities of conventional screening systems. Added to the
flexibility and versatility of platform designs, such progresses in the
manipulation of sub-nanoliter droplets has allowed to dramatically
increase experimental level of control and precision. The presentation
will aim at demonstrating through selected example, the great potential
of this technology for biotechnology and cancer research. A first part
of the presentation will exemplify how microfluidic systems can be used
to compartmentalize and assay various types of cells without deleterious
effects on their viability within complex and controlled platforms. The
application of microfluidic systems for different cell-based assays
will be demonstrated. Illustrative examples of droplet-based
microfluidic platforms with high potential impact for cancer research
will be presented. We will also show how by combining microfluidic
systems and clinical advances in molecular diagnostic we have developed
an original method to perform millions of single molecule PCR in
parallel to detect and quantify a minority of target sequences in
complex mixture of DNA with a sensitivity unreachable by conventional
procedures. To demonstrate the pertinence of our procedures to overcome
clinical oncology challenges, the results of clinical studies will be
presented.
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