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BMF's Fabrication and Laboratory Methods Section is Here!


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Biomicrofluidics is pleased to announce that it now offers embedded multimedia for articles. This technology was developed specifically for our articles in the newest section of the Journal: "Fabrication and Laboratory Methods."

It is hoped that this section will provide a strong reference point for researchers interested in developing lab-on-a-chip or related technologies. It's our hope that students, post-docs, and researchers of all stripes can learn something new from these innovative and informative tutorials.

The first article is now freely available online:

Be sure to check out the full-text HTML version to be able to stream the videos right in your browser.

What's the Right Cure for Your Disease?

Each of our bodies respond differently to stimuli. For example, I could go outside and lay down in a patch of Poison Ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) and be fine, but my mom will break out in grisly red bumps. A more apt example might be that I could take NyQuil for my cold, fall asleep and wake up rested, whereas a friend could take the same dose and lie awake in a restless state all night long.

Microfluidic Chip by Fluidigm

The microfluidic chip above is manufactured by Fluidigm, and will be used to simultaneously perform more than 9,000 reactions to try and predict a patient's response to a particular treatment for prostate cancer. Credit: Fluidigm

There are genetic reasons some drugs produce different responses for different people. So, what's the solution? Test each patient's genes and run about 9,000 simultaneous reactions to analyze the differences in how a patient's genes are expressed, rather than the specific genetic structure. This is an important distinction—sequencing genetic code is not yet a good indication of what will ultimately be expressed. Expression is a complex system that relies on many many genes to decide what ultimately happens inside your body.

So this is exactly what Howard Scher, chief of the Genitourinary Oncology Service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, has proposed in a new clinical trial for prostate cancer. The trial will take a look at rare tumor cells and analyze them using a microfluidic chip—the results will allow the researchers to decide how well the patient will respond to a certain drug. Essentially, the researchers are "building a profile" for the patient's tumor, which they can then use to decide what the best treatment will be.

The chip—manufactured by Fluidigm, a South San Francisco biotech company—uses only a few nanoliters of reagent, and is combined with DNA through a series of valves and channels. One chip costs about $300.

Emily Singer wrote a lovely and concise article about the upcoming trial in MIT's Technology Review.

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