Herein we present a diagnostic paper chip that can quantitatively detect albumin without external electronic reader and dispensing apparatus. We fabricated a diagnostic paper chip device by printing wax barrier on the paper and wicking it with citrate buffer and tetrabromophenol blue to detect albumin in sample solution. The paper chip is so simple that we dropped a sample solution at sample pad and measure the ratio of two travel distances of the sample solvent and albumin under the name of retention factor. Our result confirmed that the retention factor was constant in the samples with same concentration of albumin and useful determinant for the measurement of albumin concentration. The paper chip is affordable and equipment-free, and close to ideal point-of-care test in accordance with the assured criteria, outlined by the World Health Organization. We assume that this diagnostic paper chip will expand the concept of colorimetric determination and provide a inexpensive diagnostic method to aging society and developing country.
We present microfluidic method to rapidly analyze the effect of temperature on the change of morphologies of Antarctic bacteria (Pseudoalteromonas sp., Shewanella vesiculosa, Shewanella sp., and Cellulophaga sp.). The microfluidic device is able to generate stable temperature gradient from 7 to 40 o C and dramatically reduce the number of experiments, experimental cost and labor, and amount of sample. Based on this approach, we found that specific bacteria transforming morphology into filament or elongated body strongly depends on cultivation temperature. Interestingly, we found that the morphologies of Pseudoalteromonas sp., Shewanella vesiculosa, Shewanella sp., and Cellulophaga sp. are elongated at below 25 o C, above 20 o C, above 15 o C and above 35 o C, respectively. We envision the microfluidic device is a useful approach to analyze biological events with a high throughput manner.
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