2009
DOI: 10.1039/b807345g
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CO2and compressive immobilization of C. elegans on-chip

Abstract: We present two microfluidic approaches for immobilizing the roundworm C. elegans on-chip. The first approach creates a CO(2) micro-environment while the second one utilizes a deformable PDMS membrane to mechanically restrict the worm's movement. An on-chip 'behavior' module was used to characterize the effect of these methods on the worm's locomotion pattern. Our results indicate that both methods are appropriate for the short-term (minutes) worm immobilization. The CO(2) method offers the additional advantage… Show more

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Cited by 124 publications
(135 citation statements)
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“…Immobilization has been achieved mechanically, thermally, or chemically using pressure (Hulme et al, 2007(Hulme et al, , 2010, gelation (Krajniak and Lu, 2010), low temperatures (Chung et al, 2008), or carbondioxide (Chokshi et al, 2009).…”
Section: An Improved System For Imaging C Elegans Larvaementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Immobilization has been achieved mechanically, thermally, or chemically using pressure (Hulme et al, 2007(Hulme et al, , 2010, gelation (Krajniak and Lu, 2010), low temperatures (Chung et al, 2008), or carbondioxide (Chokshi et al, 2009).…”
Section: An Improved System For Imaging C Elegans Larvaementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, anesthetics need several minutes to take effect, and recovery of nematodes from anesthesia requires exchange of media without losing animals, all of which hinder high-throughput screening. Other techniques that can be used to reversibly immobilize C. elegans include trapping of nematodes in wedge-shaped microchannels (13), cooling (14,15), and exposure to CO 2 (16,17). However, the physiological effects of exposure to low temperatures and CO 2 remain uncharacterized for many biological processes.…”
Section: Elegans | Chemical Screen | Microfluidicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Microfluidic technology has been leveraged for various applications in nematode biology-from immobilization for imaging to laser ablation in neuronal and ageing studies [22][23][24][25]. Worm growth has also been studied using an array of chambers in which L4 worms were individually loaded to monitor development to adulthood [26], or using a device developed to observe collections of 30-40 adults worms [27].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%