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Sarah Köster

Boston University

Publishes on Cellular Mechanics and Interactions, Skin and Cellular Biology Research, Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications. 163 papers and 6.7k citations.

163Publications
6.7kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Biocompatible surfactants for water-in-fluorocarbon emulsions
Christian Holtze, Amy C. Rowat, Jeremy J. Agresti et al.|Lab on a Chip|2008
Cited by 660Open Access

Drops of water-in-fluorocarbon emulsions have great potential for compartmentalizing both in vitro and in vivo biological systems; however, surfactants to stabilize such emulsions are scarce. Here we present a novel class of fluorosurfactants that we synthesize by coupling oligomeric perfluorinated polyethers (PFPE) with polyethyleneglycol (PEG). We demonstrate that these block copolymer surfactants stabilize water-in-fluorocarbon oil emulsions during all necessary steps of a drop-based experiment including drop formation, incubation, and reinjection into a second microfluidic device. Furthermore, we show that aqueous drops stabilized with these surfactants can be used for in vitro translation (IVT), as well as encapsulation and incubation of single cells. The compatability of this emulsion system with both biological systems and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microfluidic devices makes these surfactants ideal for a broad range of high-throughput, drop-based applications.

Drop-based microfluidic devices for encapsulation of single cells
Sarah Köster, Francesco E. Angilè, Honey Duan et al.|Lab on a Chip|2008
Cited by 520Open Access

We use microfluidic devices to encapsulate, incubate, and manipulate individual cells in picoliter aqueous drops in a carrier fluid at rates of up to several hundred Hz. We use a modular approach with individual devices for each function, thereby significantly increasing the robustness of our system and making it highly flexible and adaptable to a variety of cell-based assays. The small volumes of the drops enables the concentrations of secreted molecules to rapidly attain detectable levels. We show that single hybridoma cells in 33 pL drops secrete detectable concentrations of antibodies in only 6 h and remain fully viable. These devices hold the promise of developing microfluidic cell cytometers and cell sorters with much greater functionality, allowing assays to be performed on individual cells in their own microenvironment prior to analysis and sorting.

Controlled encapsulation of single-cells into monodisperse picolitre drops
Jon F., Dino Di Carlo, Katherine J. Humphry et al.|Lab on a Chip|2008
Cited by 502Open Access

Encapsulation of cells within picolitre-size monodisperse drops provides new means to perform quantitative biological studies on a single-cell basis for large cell populations. Variability in the number of cells per drop due to stochastic cell loading is a major barrier to these techniques. We overcome this limitation by evenly spacing cells as they travel within a high aspect-ratio microchannel; cells enter the drop generator with the frequency of drop formation.