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The goal of this thesis is to design, optimize and implement a device that can measure the oxygen consumption rate (OCR) of live single cells. A microfluidic device has been designed with the ability to rapidly seal and unseal microchambers containing individual cells and an extracellular optical oxygen sensor for measuring the OCR of live single cells. The device consists of two parts, one with the sensor in microwells (top half) and the other with channels and cells trapped in Pachinko-type micro-traps (bottom half). When the two parts of the device are placed together the wells enclose each cell. Oil is flown in through the channels of the device to produce isolated and sealed microchamber around each cell. Different fluids can be flowed in and out of the device, alternating with oil, to rapidly switch between sealed and unsealed microenvironment around each cell. A fluorescent ratiometric dual pH and oxygen sensor is placed in each well. The thesis focuses on measuring changes in the oxygen consumption rate of each cell within a well. Live and dead cells are identified using a fluorescent live/dead cell assay. Finally, the technology is designed to be scalable for high-throughput applications by controlling the flow rate of the system and increasing the cell array density.
Human Papillomavirus, or HPV, is a viral pathogen that most commonly spreads through sexual contact. HPV strains 6 and 11 normally cause genital warts, while HPV strains 16 and 18 commonly cause cervical cancer, which causes cancerous cells to spread in the cervix. Physicians can detect those HPV strains, using a Pap smear, which is a diagnostic test that collects cells from the female cervix.
Johann Gregor Mendel studied patterns of trait inheritance in plants during the nineteenth century. Mendel, an Augustinian monk, conducted experiments on pea plants at St. Thomas’ Abbey in what is now Brno, Czech Republic. Twentieth century scientists used Mendel’s recorded observations to create theories about genetics.
In the 1930s, George Beadle and Boris Ephrussi discovered factors that affect eye colors in developing fruit flies. They did so while working at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California. (1) They took optic discs (colored fuchsia in the image) from fruit fly larvae in the third instar stage of development. Had the flies not been manipulated, they would have developed into adults with vermilion eyes. (2) Beadle and Ephrussi transplanted the donor optic discs into the bodies of several types of larvae, including those that would develop with normal colored eyes (brick red), and those that would develop eyes with other shades of red, such as claret, carmine, peach, and ruby (grouped together and colored black in the image). (3a) When implanted into normal hosts that would develop brick red eyes, the transplanted optic disc developed into an eye that also was brick red. (3b) When implanted into abnormal hosts that would develop eyes of some other shade of red, the transplanted optic discs developed into eyes that were vermilion. Beadle and Ephrussi concluded that there was a factor, such as an enzyme or some other protein, produced outside of the optic disc that influenced the color of the eye that developed from the disc.