Dan
Liu
,
Meilin
Sun
,
Jinwei
Zhang
,
Rui
Hu
,
Wenzhu
Fu
,
Tingting
Xuanyuan
and
Wenming
Liu
*
Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Pathology, School of Basic Medical Science, Central South University, Changsha, Hunan 410013, China. E-mail: liuwenming0229@csu.edu.cn
First published on 9th April 2022
Single-cell manipulation and analysis is critical to the study of many fundamental biological processes and uncovering cellular heterogeneity, and presents the potential for extremely valuable applications in biomedical fields, including neuroscience, regenerative therapy, early diagnosis, and drug screening. The use of microfluidic technologies in single-cell manipulation and analysis is one of the most promising approaches and enables the creation of innovative conditions that are impractical or impossible to achieve using conventional methods. Herein, an overview of the technological development of single-cell droplet microfluidics is presented. The significant advantages of microfluidic droplet technology, the dynamic parameters affecting droplet production, and the geometric structures of microfluidic devices are emphasized. Furthermore, the progress to date in passive and active droplet generation methods based on microfluidics and various microfluidic tools for the production of single-cell droplets and hydrogel microspheres are summarized. Their key features, achievements, and limitations associated with single-cell droplet and hydrogel formation are discussed. The recent popularized applications of single-cell droplet microfluidics in biomedicine involving small-molecule detection, protein analysis, and drug screening and genetic analysis of single cells are explored too. Finally, the challenges that must be overcome to enable future applications in single-cell droplet microfluidics are highlighted.
Single-cell analysis holds great promise for understanding cell diversity and discovering abnormal cells formed during disease development. Single-cell technologies have been applied in many biomedical fields, including neuroscience,8 stem cell biology,9 early diagnosis of diseases,10,11 and drug screening.12–14 High-throughput single-cell analysis is needed to accurately describe and ultimately clarify the underlying causes of the heterogeneity of cells in organisms. Classic methods of single-cell analysis include flow cytometry,15 atomic force microscopy,16 optical17 and magnetic tweezing,18 and single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy,19etc. However, each of these methods has limitations: for example, although conventional flow cytometry is automated and enables high-throughput, high-efficiency cell sorting in single-cell analysis, it requires the use of expensive instruments and complex cell surface markers, and has long sample pretreatment times, reduced cell viability, and a risk of sample contamination.20 Furthermore, other methods allow accurate manipulation of single cells, but suffer more or less from high cost, complex operation, and low detection flux problems.
Because of advantages such as low reagent consumption, high detection sensitivity, and large-scale subsystem integration, microfluidics has become a widely used technology in the life sciences and has proved to be a powerful tool for efficient single-cell analysis. The fundamental capability of microfluidic technology in terms of single-cell analysis is the manipulation of single cells to enable, for instance, single-cell capture. Microfluidic single-cell capture technologies implement a wide variety of capture strategies, including microwells,21 micropatterns,22 microdroplets,23 and microtraps.24 Microwells for single-cell capture have the advantages of simple operation and fabrication and allow for the formation of highly uniform single-cell arrays. However, microwell approaches often require that the reagents be distributed across the entire array, making it necessary to achieve instantaneous deployment of liquid flows and thus hindering the dynamic monitoring of rapid cell responses. Although micropatterns for single-cell capture share some of the advantages of microwells, they require complex pretreatment, which increases the operation time and cost. Microtraps can be used to quickly and conveniently produce high-throughput, high-density single-cell arrays; however, cells are generally squeezed by the liquid flow and chip structure during the capture process, which can potentially damage them. Droplet microfluidics is a promising novel technology for studying the generation, manipulation, and application of microdroplets with sizes ranging from several to hundreds of microns. Unlike the other methods described above, microdroplet technology can encapsulate single cells in monodisperse droplets to enable high-throughput analysis and precise control of the local extracellular environment. Microfluidic droplet technology also has high degree of repeatability, low consumption of samples and reagents, fast reaction speeds, and easily attained precise controllability. Single-cell droplet microfluidics has been widely used in a number of biological experiments, including cell culture,25,26 polymerase chain reaction (PCR),27 protease activity detection,28 and cell arrangement and sorting,29,30 and has become an important platform for high-throughput single-cell manipulation and analysis in biomedicine.
Previously, droplet microfluidics for single-cell manipulation and analysis has been reviewed concerning certain aspects of its progress, including single-cell encapsulation,31 single-cell omics,32–35 and single-cell microgels for diagnostics and therapeutics.36 Besides, several review papers on microfluidic technology for single-cell analysis37 and droplet microfluidics for biomedical applications38,39 have emerged too. However, there are few reviews on single-cell droplet microfluidics for biomedical applications with emphasis on recent advancements. Over the past six years in particular, there has been considerable progress of single-cell droplet microfluidics in single-cell encapsulation,40 operation,41 and analysis,42,43 which has extremely enhanced the potential for developing innovative analytical microsystems for biomedical purposes in the future.
Herein, we overview the recent studies and advances in microfluidic single-cell droplet technology for use in biomedicine (Scheme 1). Our review begins with an introduction of the important advantages of microfluidic droplet technology, the dynamic parameters affecting droplet production, and the geometric structure of microfluidic devices. We also discuss current microfluidics-based passive and active droplet generation methods. We then systematically summarize techniques for the preparation of single-cell droplets and hydrogel microspheres using microfluidic droplet technology. Representative cases are introduced in terms of the pivotal features, defects, and technical challenges of each single-cell droplet/hydrogel production method. Next, we discuss recent applications of single-cell droplet microfluidics in the field of biomedicine, including small-molecule detection, protein analysis, and drug screening and genetic analysis of single cells. Finally, we conclude with a discussion of the development of microfluidic single-cell droplet technologies for biomedical applications and highlight the technical challenges to the widespread application of single-cell droplet microfluidics as well as perspectives relating to the future development of microfluidic single-cell droplet systems.
Scheme 1 Overview of the recent advances in single-cell droplet microfluidics for biomedical utilization. |
The Reynolds number reflects the features of fluid flow in the microfluidic channel and represents the ratio of inertial to viscous force.48 Generally speaking, there are two states of fluid flow: laminar (low Reynolds number <1) or turbulent (high Reynolds number >1000).49 In microscale channels, the Reynolds number is typically less than one and, therefore, the inertial force is negligible relative to the viscous force and the flow follows typical laminar. Turbulence is dominated by inertial forces, which produce random eddies, vortices, and other chaotic fluctuations. It is worth noting that the mixing of fluids during chemical reactions in a microfluidic system is primarily controlled by diffusion. Although the Reynolds number can effectively characterize the dynamics of single-phase flow in microfluidic channels, it is not often used to describe the process of droplet generation. The bond number, a dimensionless parameter used to investigate the action of gravity in multiphase flow, characterizes the ratio of gravitational force to interfacial tension. In microscale flows, the bond number is generally on the order of 10−3. This means that the interface force is dominant and the influence of gravity can be ignored.50 The droplet size and formation rate can be adjusted based on the bond number by modifying its impact factors such as the density and interfacial tension of the fluid. The Weber number is the ratio of inertial force to interfacial tension. As the inertial force of the fluid in a microfluidic channel is negligible (typically <1),51 the interface effect is very important for the formation of droplets. In microscale flow, viscous force and interfacial tension play important roles in the process of droplet formation, making the relative effect of viscous force on interfacial tension, as expressed by capillary number, a key parameter.52 The capillary number is usually between 10−3 and 10. At small capillary number, the interfacial tension is dominant, the interfacial surface area is minimum, and spherical droplets are formed. At large capillary number, by contrast, the viscous force plays a dominant role, causing the droplet interfaces to gradually deform and the originally spherically symmetrical droplets to transition into non-spherical droplets.47 The regulation of the capillary number and the Weber number can influence the droplet formation state, such as dripping and jetting states in co-flowing liquid streams.36
Droplet generation | External energy | Mechanism | Device geometry | Type of droplet generation | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Passive | No | Fluid power | T-junction | Random | 58 |
No | Fluid power | Flow focusing | Random | 63 | |
No | Fluid power | Co-flow | Random | 64 | |
Active | Electrical | DC and AC electric fields | Flow focusing | Tunable | 65 |
Co-planar electrodes | T-junction | On-demand | 70 | ||
Magnetic | Non-uniform magnetic field | T-junction | Tunable | 66 | |
Square wave magnetic field | Flow focusing | Tunable | 71 | ||
Centrifugal | Rotation-induced centrifugal force | T-junction | Tunable | 72 | |
Tabletop mini-centrifuge | Co-flow | On-demand | 73 | ||
Optical | Infrared laser | Flow focusing | On-demand | 68 | |
Thermal | Temperature | Flow focusing | Tunable | 74 | |
Pulse heating | T-junction | On-demand | 75 | ||
Acoustic | Surface acoustic wave | T-junction | On-demand | 69 | |
Mechanical | Mechanical vibration | Co-flow | Tunable | 67 | |
Pneumatic valve | Flow focusing | Tunable | 76 |
Fig. 2 Passive microfluidic droplet generation. (A) Monodisperse microdroplet production in a T-junction microfluidic device with a constriction microchannel. Reproduced from ref. 58 with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2018. (B) Water-in-water microdroplet production in a flow-focusing microfluidic device. Reproduced from ref. 63 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright 2020. (C) Microdroplet generation of Trojan-horse-like microcapsules with capsule-in-capsule structures for diverse programmed sequential release using a glass-capillary microfluidic device based on coaxial focusing principle. Reproduced from ref. 64 under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Copyright 2018, the Authors, published by John Wiley and Sons. |
Most microdroplets are oil–water or water–oil droplets and generally require the use of organic reagents and surfactants, which limits their wider application in biological and cellular research. Therefore, it would be more appropriate to prepare water-in-water microdroplets without oil and surfactants. Mazutis's group proposed a droplet preparation approach using an aqueous two-phase system comprising dextran and acrylate-modified polyethylene glycol (Fig. 2B).63 Their method was used to encapsulate Gram-negative and -positive bacterial cells and to test the efficiency of the genome amplification reaction. This system has obvious advantages in terms of good biocompatibility, flexibility, and high throughput, and has potential uses in a variety of chemical and biological applications such as microcarrier preparation and tissue engineering. However, the strategy for encapsulating of most cells under passive droplet generation depends on the use of cells with a Poisson spatial distribution and, as a result, the number of microdroplets containing individual cells will be very small. Therefore, the post-separation to obtain droplets containing single cells is necessary.
Recently, multi-compartment microcapsules have been widely used in biomedical fields such as drug delivery, combined cancer therapy, tissue regeneration, and restriction enzyme reactions because they allow multiple components to be encapsulated separately. Mou et al. reported a method on the basis of a coaxial microfluidic device to prepare uniform Trojan-horse-like stimuli-responsive microcapsules (Fig. 2C).64 Specifically, uniform O1/W2/O3/W4/O5 microcapsules are prepared using the four-emulsion method. Each microcapsule contains two stimulation-responsive hydrogel shells that can release the contents of the capsule compartment via shell decomposition or fracturing. The prepared microcapsules can be used as candidate materials for controlled release and microreactions. In addition, Qin's group designed a flow-focusing microfluidic device, which forms a stable water–water interface through spontaneous phase separation of dextran and polyethylene glycol from core and shell flows, and then forms multi-compartment microcapsules under the action of oil phase shear.83
There has been some recent progress in developing active droplet generation methods in which various forces, including electrical, magnetic, mechanical, optical, and acoustic forces, are used to manipulate the microfluid to produce droplets. Because of their rapid response speeds and good compatibility with microchannel structures, electric fields are widely used in the generation of droplets. Yin et al. demonstrated a method for accurately forming oil-in-water droplets with controllable sizes in microchannels without surface treatment through the application of DC- and AC-based electric fields (Fig. 3A).65 They found that the sizes of droplets formed under the control of a square-wave electric field followed an inverse linear relationship with the field frequency and could be changed by adjusting the voltage and frequency of the field. The primary advantages of electric field methods are their fast responses, ability to accurately control droplet formation, and elimination of the need for surface treatment required in conventional PDMS microchannels, which greatly reduces the hydrodynamic characteristic requirements and solves the problem of wettability of materials in the process of droplet formation. Furthermore, Samlali et al. developed a hybrid microfluidic platform based on a co-planar electrode component to precisely control the droplet generation for single-cell isolation.70 Unfortunately, this system can only achieve the operation of a dozen droplets/single cells and its throughput needs to improve.
Fig. 3 Active microfluidic droplet generation. (A) Microdroplet production using DC and AC electric fields in a flow-focusing microfluidic device. Reproduced from ref. 65 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2019. (B) Ferrofluid droplet formation using magnetic field in a T-junction microfluidic device. Reproduced from ref. 66 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2018. (C) Microdroplet production in a coaxial focusing microfluidic device with mechanical vibration. Reproduced from ref. 67 with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2016. (D) Droplet generation using a focused laser in a flow-focusing microfluidic device. Reproduced from ref. 84 with permission from American Physical Society, copyright 2015. (E) Microdroplet formation induced by focused surface acoustic waves in a T-junction microfluidic device. Reproduced from ref. 69 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2019. |
The use of magnetic fields to generate droplets has the advantages of non-heat generation, operational simplicity, and avoidance of contact with samples. In addition, environmental parameters such as temperature, ion concentration, and pH have little effect on magnetic fields and magnetic forces, which enables new approaches to microfluidic droplet technology. Zhang et al. proposed a method for generating droplets using a magnetic field in a T-junction microfluidic device (Fig. 3B)66 in which a permanent magnet was placed on one side of the junction to form a non-uniform magnetic field. They explored the influence of the two-phase flow rate and magnetic flux density on droplet size, demonstrating that it increases with the magnetic flux density and decreases as the two-phase flow ratio and capillary number increase. The size of ferrofluid droplets can be adjusted too by changing the square wave magnetic field in a flow-focusing device.71 The precise manipulation of ferromagnetic droplets using magnetic force presents new prospects for a wide range of applications in the fields of biology, medicine, and precision instrument control.
Mechanical vibration for droplet production can be achieved by disturbing a dispersed-phase microtubule using a mechanical vibrator. Whereas most active droplet generation methods require integration of additional components such as electrodes into the chip, mechanical vibration relies on the use of a chip-exterior vibrator to disturb the microtubule, enabling simple and convenient operation. Zhu et al. quantitatively described the generation of droplets in coaxial focusing microfluidic channels affected by mechanical vibration by measuring the internal fluid flow fluctuations caused by the vibration (Fig. 3C).67 They found that the droplet frequency was synchronized with the vibrational frequency and that the size of the droplets could be modulated over a large range. Because the dependence of droplet size on microchannel geometry is very weak under mechanical droplet generation, this approach provides an effective method for overcoming the longstanding constriction of droplet size by microchannel geometry. Recently, pneumatic manipulation was demonstrated by Qin's group to be a pretty good way for controllable generation of water-in-water droplets.76 The switch cycle of pneumatic valve acting on the dispersed phase and the flow rates of the dispersed and continuous phases impacted precisely on the size of microdroplets in their integrated microfluidic system, presenting high stability, controllability, and flexibility.
Droplets can also be generated on demand on the basis of optical manipulation using a focused laser. The light forces spatially the deformation of the liquid interface by local Marangoni stresses and causes the thread-to-droplet transition as reported by Delville's group (Fig. 3D).84 Recently, Wang et al. studied the control of droplet generation using a focused infrared laser with a wavelength of 1550 nm.68 They assessed the characteristics of laser-controlled droplets produced under different flow rates, beam powers, and spot positions and compared the conditions required with and without laser control. This work provides a comprehensive resource for understanding infrared laser-controlled droplet generation and for promoting its application in microfluidic droplet technology.
Surface acoustic waves are widely used in on-demand droplet generation because they are high energy, can be confined to propagate along the substrate surface, allow for efficient fluid–solid coupling, and are clean and pollution-free. Jin et al. reported a method of microdroplet formation based on the driving of microfluid by a focused surface acoustic wave and studied the associated mechanism and process of droplet formation (Fig. 3E).69 They observed that size of the droplets was mainly determined by the frequency of the focusing surface acoustic waves, driving voltage, and velocity of the dispersed phase. Their method overcomes the limitations imposed by microchannel structure and capillary number in the general microfluidic droplet technology and has a high degree of uniformity along with a reduced system response time.
Additionally, there are still other active droplet generation methods depending on centrifugal and thermal effects. The centrifugal force induced by the rotation of microfluidic device72 or the centrifugation of glass capillaries using a tabletop mini-centrifuge73 assists the droplet formation in the T-junction or co-flowing channel, respectively. Moreover, the liquid–vapor phase transformation induced by electro-heating and ice pack-aided cooling can help to produce microdroplets with relatively small size,74 and the microwave heating can lead to the change of Laplace pressure at the interface between two fluids and then enable droplet generation on demand.75
In developing microfluidic droplet approaches for cell study, manufacturing convenience, droplet production rate, and biocompatibility are all key parameters that must be evaluated. In view of the limited number of studies on active droplet production methods, however, it is unclear which method is most suitable for cell encapsulation. None of the active methods listed in Table 1 satisfy these conditions optimally. For example, the biocompatibility of lasers and high-voltage electric fields is poor, the formation of centrifugal force-driven droplets is generally harmful to cells, and acoustics, magnetism, and other external driving methods involve either relatively slow generation rates or complex chip integration. Passive methods have disadvantages in terms of low single-cell encapsulation rates and the inability to generate droplets on demand. However, these shortcomings only reflect the current development situation and do not represent inherent limitations, as the use of microfluidic droplet technology for single-cell encapsulation remains underdeveloped. Thus, the application of microfluidic droplet technology in single-cell research has broad research prospects.
Fig. 4 Single-cell encapsulation in droplets. (A) Single-cell microdroplet generation in a flow-focusing microfluidic device. The quantity of cells per microdroplet follows the Poisson distribution. Reproduced from ref. 86 with permission from John Wiley and Sons, copyright 2017. (B) A microfluidic system combined with a sorting electrode for purifying single-cell encapsulation. Reproduced from ref. 88 with permission from John Wiley and Sons, copyright 2019. (C) On-demand droplet collection system based on a combination of droplet microfluidic technology and fluorescence-activated sorting technology to collect required microdroplets continuously. Reproduced from ref. 25 with permission from John Wiley and Sons, copyright 2020. (D) A droplet microfluidic system with curved microchannel structure for generation of microdroplets to achieve significant improvement in single-cell capture efficiency through inertial sequencing caused by Dean force. Reproduced from ref. 91 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright 2012. (E) A microfluidic system combining spiral and serpentine channels to focus cells and microbeads for high-efficiency single-cell pairing. Reproduced from ref. 92 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2019. |
In a random encapsulation method, the number of cells per droplet depends on the initial concentration of the cell suspension and the droplet volume but will follow a highly random distribution in which the proportion of single-cell droplets is low. Thus, the degree to which the number of cells encapsulated within an individual droplet can be controlled must be further strengthened. To improve the efficiency of single-cell encapsulation, some researchers have adopted a method of random encapsulation followed by sorting. For example, Navi et al. proposed a method for creating water-in-water droplets using a flow-focused microfluidic device.87 In their device, ferrofluid is integrated into an all-water droplet microfluidic system to enable the diamagnetic separation of single-cell encapsulated and empty droplets. The primary advantage of their platform with respect to the existing platforms is good biocompatibility, with no harm being rendered to the cells, and a chip that is simple and easy to operate. By using an antimagnetic force to manipulate the cell-encapsulating droplets, the droplets do not need to be magnetized and the cells therefore do not come into direct contact with the magnetic material, enabling an unlabeled cell operation with a separation purity of 100%. This simple and biocompatible microfluidic platform is quite applicable in single-cell analysis. Further, Nan et al. introduced a microfluidic system to produce and sort single-cell microencapsulations (Fig. 4B),88 through which they were able to achieve high-throughput preparation of microdroplets and microgels in microfluidic devices. Importantly, an on-chip sorting electrode was used to complete the selection of single-cell microencapsulations while transferring them to the culture medium. At a cell density of 3.05 × 106 cell per mL and a droplet diameter of 50 μm, they achieved a single-cell encapsulation rate of 16%. After sorting, the single-cell encapsulation rate increased to more than 80%. This method can be applied to integrate droplet gelation, single-cell-laden microgel sorting, and transference to the medium to enable high-throughput analysis at the single-cell level in comprehensively assessing cell heterogeneity. More recently, Shum's group developed an on-demand droplet collection system based on a combination of microfluidic droplet and fluorescence-activated sorting technology, that could collect required droplets continuously and quantitatively into microtubules without significant sample loss or microfluidic interruption (Fig. 4C).25 Specifically, their approach allows each branch channel to be alternately sorted, distributed, and collected following droplet generation to achieve the continuous collection of single-cell droplets. The encapsulated single-cell droplets are then effectively captured on a culture plate, and further cultured to study cell behavior and fully analyze the specificity of individual cells. Through the use of fluorescence-activated droplets sorting and valve-driven distribution, this method can screen single cells at a frequency of more than 200 Hz with an individual cell encapsulation efficiency and recovery rate of 98.5% and 99%, respectively. This approach is much more efficient than conventional manual cell selection and laser-capture microdissection technology and has broad applicational prospects in single-cell-level analysis tasks, such as cytokine detection in immunology, mass spectrometry in proteomics, and whole-genome sequencing of the transcriptome.
Kemna et al. were the first to use Dean flow to form single-cell arrangements, followed by single-cell encapsulation (Fig. 4D).91 Dean flow can induce the cells to gather within balanced positionings to achieve desired spatial arrangements, ensure that the cell flow cycle is consistent with the droplet generation frequency, and improve the encapsulation efficiency to 77%. Their method uses the microstructure to control the regular arrangement of cells and then complete the encapsulation of single cells, which effectively improves the ratio of single-cell droplets. However, this requires not only control of the formation of Dean flow but also the synchronization of cell and droplet frequencies, which is difficult to achieve.
He's group combined spiral and serpentine channels to efficiently focus cells and microbeads. They used their approach to encapsulate both barcoded microbeads and human mouse cells and then characterized the cell heterogeneity via sequencing (Fig. 4E).92 Using this method, they achieved 300% and 40% increases in cell utilization rate relative to the conventional Drop-seq device and the device applied only for focusing microbeads,93 respectively. The results supported an enhanced operation efficiency of their microfluidic chip. This chip design has great potential for achieving efficient single-cell expression profiles.
In general, a synthetic polymer polymerized by ultraviolet light is applied to form gel microspheres for encapsulating cells. A cell suspension containing a photoinitiator, cross-linking agent, and monomer is used as the dispersed phase. After the microdroplets have been produced in the microfluidic chip, the photoinitiator, under irradiation by ultraviolet light, promotes the cross-linking reaction of the monomer under the action of a cross-linking agent to produce gelated microspheres. Kamperman et al. used polyethylene glycol diacrylate as a raw material to form microdroplets encapsulated with pluripotent human mesenchymal stem cells or bovine chondrocytes in a microfluidic flow-focusing device at an encapsulating speed of 1 kHz (Fig. 5A).101 The droplets were photocrosslinked through an external ultraviolet light source in the downstream channel to prepare the cell-loading microgels and maintain high cell activity. Single-cell microgels (>90% purity) sorted by flow cytometry were then mixed with different biocompatible materials such as polyethylene glycol diacrylate and alginate to create various modular bioinks, which can be used for 3D printing to rebuild the cellular microenvironment at the single-cell resolution. However, ultraviolet irradiation has some toxic effects on cells. There are two potential ways for addressing this problem: (1) the exposure time to ultraviolet irradiation can be reduced or the ultraviolet wavelength can be adjusted; (2) new polymerization methods can be developed to avoid cell damage.
Fig. 5 Single-cell encapsulation in hydrogels. (A) Production of single cell-laden microgels using polyethylene glycol diacrylate to maintain high cell activity. Reproduced from ref. 101 with permission from John Wiley and Sons, copyright 2017. (B) Deterministic encapsulation of single cells in thin alginate layer by an internal gelation method. Reproduced from ref. 111 with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2017. (C) Microfluidic fabrication of cell-laden microgels with uniform structures. Reproduced from ref. 104 with permission from John Wiley and Sons, copyright 2015. (D) Colony-containing agarose microgels produced by encapsulating single yeast cells into agarose microdroplets, retrieving microgels, and then culturing for colony formation within the microgels. Reproduced from ref. 114 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright 2019. |
Alginate is a water-soluble linear macromolecule polysaccharide compound extracted from brown algae that is formed from β-D-manuronic and α-L-guluronic acid units in different proportions.108 The carboxyl group in a guluronic acid unit can react with divalent cations such as calcium, barium, and magnesium, resulting in rapid gel formation.100 Because sodium alginate is non-toxic and has a mild gelation mode and good biocompatibility, it is often used to generate gel microspheres for encapsulating cells and can be applied in cell biology, tissue engineering, drug screening, and other biological fields. In general, there are two methods for controlling the gelation process of sodium alginate: external gelation, in which the cross-linking agent diffuses outside of the droplets; and internal gelation, in which the cross-linking agent is loaded into the aqueous phase and triggered by stimulation.
Using external gelation, Liao et al. encapsulated cells in biocompatible sodium alginate droplets and enveloped them in oil droplets to form double emulsions based on a double flow-focusing regime.109 Oil-diffused Ca2+ enters into the sodium alginate to form microgels. Although this gelation method is helpful in maintaining high cell viability, complete gelation of a microgel cannot be achieved within short time frames because of the difficulty of calcium diffusion. To solve the problem of incomplete gelation, researchers have proposed a droplet-fusing method to better prepare single-cell microgels. A new method for the preparation of single-cell microgels based on microfluidic droplet technology was reported by Liu et al.110 They used a cell suspension containing 2% sodium alginate or 1% CaCl2 solution as the dispersed phase and soybean oil as the continuous phase to produce pairs of distinct droplets. The two droplets met and fused downstream and Ca2+ gelated the sodium alginate to form gel microspheres with encapsulated cells. However, because the cross-linking occurred before the calcium ions were uniformly distributed, the homogeneity of the microgel was reduced. In addition, fusion typically led to an increase in the volume of the final cross-linked alginate microgel.
Mooney's group developed an internal gelation method for preparing single-cell microgels using a flow-focusing microfluidic device (Fig. 5B).111 Specifically, cells are suspended in a solution of calcium carbonate nanoparticles, which are adsorbed onto the cell surfaces. After washing of the excess nanoparticles, the cell suspension is mixed with a sodium alginate solution as the dispersed phase to form water-in-oil droplets. Because of the presence of acetic acid in the oil phase, H+ diffusion releases calcium, which mediates the gelation of sodium alginate to form microspheres. Although this method can significantly improve the efficiency of single-cell encapsulation without additional downstream treatment, only the droplets containing cells will be cross-linked and the structure of the resulting gel microspheres will be uneven. To solve the problem of uneven gel microsphere structure, Utech et al. proposed a method to prepare monodisperse alginate microgels with uniform structures using microfluidic droplet technology (Fig. 5C).104 The use of a water-soluble calcium complex as a cross-linking precursor allows for the homogeneous distribution of calcium ions within the generated alginate droplets. Specifically, following encapsulation of single mesenchymal stem cells in droplets, acetic acid is added to the continuous phase to dissociate the complexes and release calcium ions, which in turn react with sodium alginate to form alginate microgels with a uniform structure.
Agarose is a natural linear polysaccharide extracted from the cell walls of red algae that is composed of β-D-galactose and α-3,6-galactoside. It is a typical natural polymer that is initiated by temperature in a solution at 37 °C and then cross-linked into a gel at 20 °C.112 Agarose—in particular low-melting-point agarose—is suitable for cell encapsulation experiments due to its good biocompatibility and mild gelation conditions.113 For example, Liu et al. proposed isogenic colony sequencing as a general method for the high-throughput analysis of gene expression in cells (Fig. 5D).114 In their process, single yeast cells are encapsulated with low-melting-point agarose to form agarose droplets which are collected into a 50 mL centrifuge tube placed on ice to form agarose microgels. The agarose microgels are resuspended in a suitable medium for overnight culturing to form single-yeast-cell colony microgels, which provide sufficient RNA for colony deep sequencing and reduce the errors arising in individual single-cell gene expression profiles.
Gelatin is a mixture of amino acids such as glycine, proline, and hydroxyproline that forms through the degradation of collagen in connective tissues such as skin, bone, and muscle tendon.112 Gelatin also forms as a network structure through temperature-induced polymerization. Li et al. used gelatin as a hydrogel material to encapsulate microalgae cells (E. gracilis and C. reinhardtii) for single-cell culture and screening.106 Based on the flow cytometry-assisted sorting, the cultured monoclonal populations of microalgae with rapid biomass productivity or high lipid productivity can be selected for multiple screening. In particular, thermally responsive gelatin can maintain a liquid culture of cells in the range of 20–27 °C, with gelation to form microgels occurring at 4 °C for sorting and degelation occurring for effective cell recovery when the temperature is raised to 35 °C. Although the overall process does not harm the cells, the complex gelatinization mechanism has certain disadvantages, including a long gelatinization time in which it generally takes several hours to form a moderately hard gel, that lead to low experimental efficiency. To overcome this shortcoming, researchers have applied chemical modification to gelatin. Nan et al. used methacrylic gelatin, an optically cross-linked gelatin, that can be rapidly gelatinized by ultraviolet irradiation. Their on-chip gel technology was seamlessly combined with microfluidic droplet technology to achieve high-throughput preparation of gel microspheres.88
To better simulate the physiological environment of cells in vivo, researchers have used multi-composed materials (e.g., gelatin and collagen) to prepare single-cell microgels. The mechanical properties of collagen are poor when it is used alone as a scaffold, but the addition of gelatin improves the mechanical properties of the gel by supporting cell adhesion while retaining the regulatory properties of the collagen. The material properties (stiffness, pore diameter, cross-linking degree, and expansion ratio) of a microgel can be controlled by changing the composition of the droplets and the cross-linking time.115 Encapsulated cell viability is highly dependent on cross-linking time, with longer cross-linking times leading to reduced cell viability. Approximately 70% of the cells in a microgel with a cross-linking time of 8 min were able to survive for one week, indicating that the formation of gel beads does not damage cells and can potentially be used in future single-cell analysis. In addition, single cells in microgels are mostly off-center. To preventing cell escape and realize the special manipulation purpose (e.g., long-term cell culture), Kamperman et al. presented a microfluidic droplet method for centering single cells in microgels being composed of hyaluronic acid and dextran by delaying enzymatic cross-linking.95 This single-cell centering achieved a constant prevention (over 28 d) of cell escape from microgels, which greatly improved the reliability of long-term culture of single cells.
More recently, Xu's group developed a surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS)-microfluidic droplet platform to enable the label-free simultaneous analysis of multiplexed metabolites at the single-cell level via a versatile magnetic SERS substrate composed of silver nanoparticle-decorated Fe3O4 magnetic microspheres (Fig. 6A).126 They achieved label-free, nondestructive, simultaneous determination of three single-cell metabolites: pyruvate, adenosine triphosphate, and lactate. Their metal-magnetic composite substrate is useful in achieving the efficient adsorption of single-cell metabolites and the fast separation from complex matrices, and has high SERS sensitivity making the SERS-microdroplet platform a powerful tool for exploring single-cell heterogeneity at the metabolic level. Single-cell droplets can also be sorted based on small-molecule dynamics. Zielke et al. developed a droplet microfluidic device to separate cancer cell subpopulations based on glycolysis, an approach that does not require the use of markers or active sorting components.127 Their technology is used to control the secretion of protons in the process of glycolysis in breast cancer cells under specific surfactant environments to decrease the pH values of the droplets. As the droplet pH value decreases, the interfacial tension of droplets increases, enabling the separation of cells at different glycolytic levels. Because cancer cells are exposed to different oxygen and nutrient environments, they differ in terms of their glycolysis reactions. This method can be used to separate cancer cells from normal cells based on selected metabolic differences and to identify cells with similar physical characteristics.
Fig. 6 Applications of single-cell droplet microfluidics for small-molecule detection. (A) A SERS-microfluidic droplet system for single-cell encapsulation and simultaneous detection of three metabolites produced by single cells. Reproduced from ref. 126 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2019. (B) Detecting hydrogen peroxide in the single-cell droplets in combination with horseradish peroxidase-modified gold nanoclusters. Reproduced from ref. 130 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2018. (C) Rapid detection and imaging ascorbic acid in single cells using a droplet microfluidic platform. Reproduced from ref. 131 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2020. |
Intracellular reactive oxygen species, such as superoxide anion128 and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2),129 participate in the regulation of the immune system, cell growth and migration, metabolic regulation, important biological substance synthesis, and other physiological processes. Liu's group developed a highly sensitive droplet microfluidic method for the quantitative determination of H2O2 secreted by different types of single cells combined with Au nanoclusters (Fig. 6B).130 H2O2 secreted by a single cell can induce significant fluorescence changes in horseradish peroxidise-modified Au nanoclusters. Their results showed that fast-growing cancer cells can produce secretions with higher H2O2 content than normal cell lines, which provides a useful tool for studying the intercellular differences in H2O2 secretion at the single-cell level.
Ascorbic acid (AA), also known as vitamin C, is a strong antioxidant and a cofactor in enzymatic reactions, and can prevent free radical-induced diseases, especially Parkinson's disease and cancers. AA can efficiently scavenge toxic free radicals and other reactive oxygen species that are associated with several forms of tissue damage and disease, making it useful to develop facile, rapid and simple analytical methods for the highly selective and reliable measurement of AA. Recently, Alizadeh et al. reported a droplet microfluidic approach for the intracellular imaging of AA in living cells (Fig. 6C).131 By isolating small microdroplets, they were able to rapidly detect and image AA in single cells. Their sensing system is based on a non-oxidation reduction strategy in which a fluorescent polymer nanocomposite is applied. Their technique provides a robust method and an ideal platform for studying single cells and a promising novel tool for molecular conducting biology assays in clinical assessment.
In the tumor metastasis process, malignant tumor cells break through a surrounding physiological barrier and migrate. Tumor and immune cells have different migration abilities in vivo. Secreted products such as matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) represent promising drug targets and biomarker candidates and provide valuable information for evaluating cancer metastasis and, based on an analysis of their activity, allow for the screening of new drugs to regulate inflammatory responses and tumorigenesis.133–135 Yu et al. reported a microfluidic approach for the detection of MMP9 (a gelatinase subgroup of MMPs) enzyme activity in individual tumor cell droplets using a flow-focusing capillary microfluidic device (Fig. 7A).121 MMP9 secreted by cells is able to cleave the peptide modified by a pair of fluorophore/quenching molecules (FITC and DABCYL). This can be used to measure the activity of MMP9 enzyme in microdroplets in terms of fluorescence intensity, enabling the quantitative analysis of the proteolysis activity of MMP9 secreted by a single cancer cell with a high degree of reproducibility to evaluate the invasive function of cancer cells. The ultra-high sensitivity of this method in the detection of cellular aggressiveness makes it applicable in high-throughput screening for cell diagnosis and cancer research. Because of the fluidity of carrier oil, however, existing droplet-based single cell matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) analysis methods are rarely able to continuously track the proteolysis content of droplets. To improve this, Mu's group described the use of a thermosetting oil in the real-time monitoring of MMP analysis of droplets through a process in which droplets are fixed by converting them into solids following formation (Fig. 7B).135 This method can enable the real-time monitoring of single-cell proteolytic activity without compromising the flexibility of the droplet microfluidics, allowing for the calculation of a reaction rate according to a real-time fluorescence curve. The obvious cellular heterogeneities in MMP activity revealed by this process indicate its potential for use in other types of cell-based high-resolution dynamic information analysis.
Fig. 7 Applications of single-cell droplet microfluidics for protein analysis. (A) A glass-capillary microfluidic device for single-cell encapsulation and detection of the enzymatic activities of MMP9 secreted by single cells in microdroplets. Reproduced from ref. 121 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2017. (B) Dynamic detection of single-cell MMP activity in a droplet array immobilized by thermosetting oil. Reproduced from ref. 135 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2021. (C) A droplet microfluidic platform for single-cell encapsulation and detection of VEGF and IL-8 secreted by single cells. Reproduced from ref. 138 with permission from American Chemical Society, copyright 2019. |
Cytokines secreted by mammalian cells (e.g., immune cells, endothelial cells, and cancer cells) play a key role in infection, immune response, inflammation, and disease development.136 In particular, the increased expression of cytokines is related to tumor vascularization and growth, which in turn can generate new tumor blood vessels and amplify existing ones.137 Hsu et al. established a microfluidic droplet system for single-cell multiplexed secretomic analysis with high sensitivity.94 A generated droplet contained an individual cell and a hydrogel microparticle synthesized by multiple antibody-modified poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), allowing the simultaneous detection of multiple secretions of the single cancer cell including interleukin-6, interleukin-8 (IL-8), and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1. The system can also accomplish the determination of significant heterogeneity for cell secretions from 6000 cells within 60 min. Furthermore, Xu's group established a SERS-droplet microfluidic platform for the rapid, ultra-sensitive, and simultaneous detection of cytokines including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and IL-8 secreted by individual cancer cells (Fig. 7C).138 Their results revealed that cell-to-cell interactions can promote cancer cell angiogenesis by up-regulating VEGF and IL-8. The high sensitivity of this method arises from the amplification effect of metal plasma enhancement and magnetic field-induced aggregation, which allow for the formation of high-throughput water-in-oil droplets containing single cells and four immune particles. Furthermore, cell sorting can be performed according to different excretion capacities to explore the intercellular heterogeneity of cytokine release from single cells. This technique provides a new approach to understanding the biological role of various cytokines in tumor vascularization and aggressive tumor growth. Recently, Wimmers et al. presented a microfluidic single-cell droplet system for the immunofluorescence detection of type I interferon (IFN) production in human plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs).139 Type I IFN is a key cytokine of immunity associated with infection and cancer. Their results supported that type I IFN production is restricted to a small amount of individually stimulated pDCs, and indicated stochastic differences in pDC-driven type I IFN production. In addition, Yuan et al. used microfluidic devices to quickly encapsulate single natural killer NK-92 MI cells and their K562 target cells into microdroplets to improve the ability of the single cells to secrete IFN-γ.140 Droplet encapsulation can prevent secretions from spreading to adjacent cells and significantly reduce the false positive and negative rates obtained under non-microfluidic droplet approaches.
Fig. 8 Applications of single-cell droplet microfluidics for drug screening analysis. (A) A droplet-based digital minimum inhibitory concentration screen platform for quantifying the single-cell distribution of phenotypic responses to antibiotics. Reproduced from ref. 143 under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Copyright 2020, the Authors, published by Springer Nature. (B) An integrated droplet microfluidic array platform for analyzing the uptake and cytotoxicity of doxorubicin in wild-type and doxorubicin-resistant breast cancer cells. Reproduced from ref. 144 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright 2015. (C) A high-throughput droplet microfluidic system for antibody binding detection and antibody screening by using a dual-color normalized fluorescence readout. Reproduced from ref. 146 under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Copyright 2018, the Authors, published by Elsevier. |
Unlike flow cytometry analysis, single-cell drug screening tests are carried out using microdroplet approaches in which the selected compounds are added to isolated individual cells rather than to a cell population. This allows for interactions between cells to be avoided and, because different cells have different sensitivities to drugs, makes it possible to isolate drug-resistant cells from groups of cells for further analysis, potentially providing for the development of new drugs for the early treatment of cancer. For example, Sarkar et al. used an integrated microfluidic droplet array platform to analyze the uptake and cytotoxicity of doxorubicin in wild-type and doxorubicin-resistant breast cancer cells (Fig. 8B).144 They found that drug-sensitive cells were more prone than drug-resistant cells to dying in the presence or absence of doxorubicin (Dox). They also observed polyphasic uptake in individual drug-sensitive cells, whereas the drug-resistant cells demonstrated low uptake and retention. Bithi et al. proposed a pipette-based microfluidic cell separation technique for generating microdroplet arrays.145 Their platform can be used for single-cell drug analysis of small numbers of tumor cells or tumor cell clusters within a small sample volume. They used the platform to carry out single-cell analysis of the response of tumor cells to doxorubicin and found that, although the drug uptakes of individual tumor cells differed, the occurrence of apoptosis was determined by the accumulation of the key intracellular concentration of doxorubicin. Their method provides an ideal platform for understanding tumor cell–drug interactions.
Monoclonal antibodies are one of the largest classes of biopharmaceuticals used clinically against cancer, autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, and other clinical conditions. Technologies to screen antibodies for the binding of cell-surface receptors face certain limitations. Conventional hybridoma screens typically do not allow for the assaying of more than a few thousand clones, are cost intensive, and take several weeks to complete. Furthermore, microtiter-plate-based formats are dependent on cell proliferation to obtain sufficient amounts of antibodies for screening. Thus, it remains a challenge to screen antibodies for the binding of cell-surface receptors (the most important class of drug targets) or for binding to target cells rather than purified proteins. To address this, Shembekar et al. established a high-throughput droplet microfluidic system employing a dual-color normalized fluorescence readout to detect antibody binding (Fig. 8C).146 Their platform can obtain quantitative data on target cell recognition, using as little as 33 fg of IgG per assay. Starting with an excess of hybridoma cells releasing non-specific antibodies, individual clones secreting specific binders can be enriched 220-fold following the sorting of 80000 clones in a single experiment, demonstrating the advantages of the system in screening antibodies for the specific binding of cancer target cells in a high-throughput single-cell format. Their results point the way toward new therapeutic antibody discoveries, particularly given the fact that the single-cell approach is also applicable to primary human plasma cells. Eyer et al. also proposed a microfluidic droplet strategy for detection of antibody secretion by individual cells from mice immunized with tetanus toxoid.147 Single cells were encapsulated in microdroplets using a flow-focusing device and then analyzed in a droplet array chip using a fluorescence relocation-based immunoassay. This microfluidic platform allows quantitative, sensitive, and simultaneous analysis of antibody secretion rate, specificity, and affinity for tetanus toxoid. Furthermore, Gérard et al. presented a high-throughput screening of antibodies from millions of non-immortalized cells using a integrated microfluidic droplet device with a sorting electrode component.148 The screening of different antibodies against tetanus toxoid, glucose-6-phosphate isomerase, and tetraspanin-8 is mainly based on fluorescence-assisted single-cell bioassay and sorting, paired VH–VL sequencing of antibodies using in-droplet single-cell barcoded reverse transcription, and bioinformatics analysis. The microfluidic system enabled recovery of ∼450–900 antibody sequences from ∼2200 antibody-secreting cells in each run, which can facilitate the potential antibody identification for therapeutic purposes.
Lan et al. described a method for ultra-high-throughput single-cell genome sequencing using microfluidic droplet technology (Fig. 9A).149 In their approach, individual cells are encapsulated in microgels, which can permeate molecules such as enzymes, detergents, and small molecules with hydraulic diameters smaller than their pore sizes, but can also spatially capture large molecules such as genomic DNA. The use of microgels facilitates the cleaning of encapsulated cells to perform necessary steps such as cell lysis and genome processing while maintaining the separation of individual genomes. Using their approach, they easily carried out a series of operations like cell lysis and genome processing on the encapsulated cells, while maintaining partitions between individual genomes. Through its combination of microgel and microfluidic droplet technology, their method can process 50000 cells in a short time and achieve ultra-high-throughput single-cell genome sequencing. However, their encapsulating process follows a Poisson distribution resulting in a low encapsulation rate. Furthermore, Moon et al. developed a new droplet microfluidic platform, in which high-concentration microbeads containing oligonucleotide barcodes are spontaneously arranged in spiral channels under the effect of inertia, and then coencapsulated with individual cells in droplets for single-cell sequencing (Fig. 9B).93 Through the deterministic encapsulation of inertially ordered beads, their platform significantly improves throughput and reduces barcode errors, significantly reducing intermittent errors in multi-bead packaging relative to the nondeterministic Drop-seq system. Guo et al. developed a rapid, PCR-free single-cell miRNA assay to amplify the target miRNA signal using a DNA hybridization chain reaction in a droplet microfluidic platform with a photomultiplier (PMT) sensor (Fig. 9C),150 in which single cells and lysates are encapsulated in droplets and target miRNA released by individual cells interacts with DNA amplifiers to trigger the hybridization reaction and produce fluorescence signals. The target sequence is cycled without the use of PCR thermal cycling to significantly amplify the fluorescence signal. Their method effectively converts laboratory desktop PCR analysis into real-time droplet analysis using post-reaction fluorescence for reading to achieve ultra-high-throughput single-cell sequencing (300–500 cells per minute) for rapid biomedical identification. In addition, Segaliny et al. reported a single-cell droplet microfluidic method for identifying T cells expressing engineered T cell receptor (TCR) by dynamic monitoring of TCR T cell activation, reverse-transcription PCR, and sequencing of TCR chains at a single-cell level.151
Fig. 9 Applications of single-cell droplet microfluidics for genetic analysis. (A) Ultra-high throughput single-cell genome sequencing using droplet microfluidics. Reproduced from ref. 149 with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2017. (B) A droplet microfluidic device containing a bead-ordering unit for high throughput single-cell RNA-sequencing. Reproduced from ref. 93 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright 2018. (C) A microfluidics-based online PMT analysis system for single-cell encapsulation and single-cell miRNA detection and screening. Reproduced from ref. 150 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright 2018. (D) Droplet-based single-cell detection of 16S rRNA for pathogen identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing from clinical urine samples. Reproduced from ref. 153 under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Copyright 2021, the Authors, published by John Wiley and Sons. |
More recently, single-cell droplet microfluidics-based genetic analysis has increasingly been applied by research scholars for the application in clinical diagnosis. Rivello et al. described a general method for investigating metabolism of circulating stromal cells associated with metastatic disease to reveal the prognosis of prostate cancer using a droplet-based microfluidic chip.152 They performed in-droplet extracellular pH measurement of single cells from metastatic prostate cancer patients for detecting and separating highly metabolically active cells (HMCs). Single-cell mRNA-sequencing analysis of HMCs was then conducted, and the results showed that approximately 87% were circulating stromal cells with high metabolism. Kaplan–Meier analysis reveals that those patients with over 5 HMCs have a considerably poorer survival probability than patients with fewer than 5 HMCs. Therefore, HMCs could be an indicator of poor prognosis in prostate cancer. The single-cell droplet microfluidic method is potentially useful for prostate cancer diagnosis. Additionally, Wang's group established a single-cell-droplet-based microfluidic system for pathogen identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing from clinical urine specimens (Fig. 9D).153 Fluorescent hybridization probes were used to detect 16S Ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA) from single bacteria in microdroplets, allowing molecular discrimination of uropathogenic bacteria from clinical urine specimens within 16 min and quantitative indication of the susceptibility of bacteria to the antibiotic. The microfluidic system achieved a brilliant performance for urinary pathogen analysis within a short turnaround time (<30 min). The diversity genetic analysis of single cells from clinical samples using droplet-based microfluidics is quite valuable for accelerating the development of clinical diagnosis/treatment and precision medicine.
Although some progress has been made in single-cell manipulation and analysis using microfluidic droplet technology, there remain bottlenecks. First, microfluidic droplet technology has a low single-cell encapsulation rate, and the detection tools used for single-cell analysis are still quantitatively limited and have relatively low sensitivities. The development of simpler, cheaper, and more integrated droplet microfluidic devices will significantly improve single-cell analysis. Furthermore, the gel materials used to encapsulate single cells are functionally limited, and it is necessary to develop multi-composite/functional gel materials for culturing to enable the effective recreation of the 3D microenvironment of cells in vivo for the high-throughput analysis of single cells. Finally, the complexity of the cell itself and the fact that the current trends in single-cell analysis involve multimodal characterization encourage the development of methods for the synchronous detection of more types of intercellular molecules. These challenges will promote the further development of droplet microfluidics for operational and detection purposes and in multi-component single-cell analysis, providing a scientific basis for further biomedical research on single cells and leading to more accurate and comprehensive understanding of the functions and regulatory mechanisms of the molecules involved in biological processes.
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