Optofluidic detection for cellular phenotyping

Quantitative analysis of the output of processes and molecular interactions within a single cell is highly critical to the advancement of accurate disease screening and personalized medicine. Optical detection is one of the most broadly adapted measurement methods in biological and clinical assays a...

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Published inLab on a chip Vol. 12; no. 19; pp. 3552 - 3565
Main Authors Tung, Yi-Chung, Huang, Nien-Tsu, Oh, Bo-Ram, Patra, Bishnubrata, Pan, Chi-Chun, Qiu, Teng, Chu, Paul K, Zhang, Wenjun, Kurabayashi, Katsuo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 07.10.2012
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Summary:Quantitative analysis of the output of processes and molecular interactions within a single cell is highly critical to the advancement of accurate disease screening and personalized medicine. Optical detection is one of the most broadly adapted measurement methods in biological and clinical assays and serves cellular phenotyping. Recently, microfluidics has obtained increasing attention due to several advantages, such as small sample and reagent volumes, very high throughput, and accurate flow control in the spatial and temporal domains. Optofluidics, which is the attempt to integrate optics with microfluidics, shows great promise to enable on-chip phenotypic measurements with high precision, sensitivity, specificity, and simplicity. This paper reviews the most recent developments of optofluidic technologies for cellular phenotyping optical detection.
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ISSN:1473-0197
1473-0189
DOI:10.1039/c2lc40509a