Issue 17, 2016

A microfluidic cell-trapping device for single-cell tracking of host–microbe interactions

Abstract

The impact of cellular individuality on host–microbe interactions is increasingly appreciated but studying the temporal dynamics of single-cell behavior in this context remains technically challenging. Here we present a microfluidic platform, InfectChip, to trap motile infected cells for high-resolution time-lapse microscopy. This approach allows the direct visualization of all stages of infection, from bacterial uptake to death of the bacterium or host cell, over extended periods of time. We demonstrate the utility of this approach by co-culturing an established host-cell model, Dictyostelium discoideum, with the extracellular pathogen Klebsiella pneumoniae or the intracellular pathogen Mycobacterium marinum. We show that the outcome of such infections is surprisingly heterogeneous, ranging from abortive infection to death of the bacterium or host cell. InfectChip thus provides a simple method to dissect the time-course of host–microbe interactions at the single-cell level, yielding new insights that could not be gleaned from conventional population-based measurements.

Graphical abstract: A microfluidic cell-trapping device for single-cell tracking of host–microbe interactions

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 May 2016
Accepted
08 Jul 2016
First published
08 Jul 2016

Lab Chip, 2016,16, 3276-3285

A microfluidic cell-trapping device for single-cell tracking of host–microbe interactions

M. J. Delincé, J. Bureau, A. T. López-Jiménez, P. Cosson, T. Soldati and J. D. McKinney, Lab Chip, 2016, 16, 3276 DOI: 10.1039/C6LC00649C

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