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Screening Therapeutic Agents Specific to Breast Cancer Stem Cells Using a Microfluidic Single‐Cell Clone‐Forming Inhibition Assay
Author(s) -
Lin Dongguo,
Li Peiwen,
Feng Jin,
Lin Zhun,
Chen Xiao,
Yang Na,
Wang Lihui,
Liu Dayu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201901001
Subject(s) - clone (java method) , cancer stem cell , cell , single cell analysis , microfluidics , stem cell , cancer cell , cell culture , cancer research , chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , cancer , biology , materials science , nanotechnology , biochemistry , genetics , dna
Screens of cancer stem cells (CSCs)‐specific agents present significant challenges to conventional cell assays due to the difficulty in preparing CSCs ready for drug testing. To overcome this limitation, developed is a microfluidic single‐cell assay for screening breast cancer stem cell–specific agents. This assay takes advantage of the single‐cell clone‐forming capability of CSCs, which can be specifically inhibited by CSC‐targeting agents. The single‐cell assay is performed on a microfluidic chip with an array of 3840 cell‐capturing units; the single‐cell arrays are easily formed by flowing a cell suspension into the microchip. Achieved is a single cell‐capture rate of ≈60% thus allowing more than 2000 single cells to be analyzed in a single test. Over long‐term suspension culture, only a minority of cells survive and form tumorspheres. The clone‐formation rate of MCF‐7, MDA‐MB‐231, and T47D cells is 1.67%, 5.78%, and 5.24%, respectively. The clone‐forming inhibition assay is conducted by exposing the single‐cell arrays to a set of anticancer agents. The CSC‐targeting agents show complete inhibition of single‐cell clone formation while the nontargeting ones show incomplete inhibition effects. The resulting microfluidic single‐cell assay with the potential to screen CSC‐specific agents with high efficiency provides new tools for individualized tumor therapy.