Measuring and simulating the biophysical basis of the acoustic contrast factor of biological cells
Cooper Lars Harshbarger, Alen Pavlic, Davide Cesare Bernardoni, Amelie, Viol, Jess Gerrit Snedeker, J\"urg Dual, Unai Silv\'an

TL;DR
This study investigates the biophysical factors influencing the acoustic contrast factor (ACF) of biological cells, combining experimental measurements and numerical modeling to understand how cell mechanics affect acoustic manipulation techniques.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the static and dynamic mechanical properties affecting the ACF, highlighting the complexity beyond static E-modulus alone.
Findings
Static E-modulus increase correlates with higher ACF after fixation.
Actin polymerization inhibition decreases ACF, indicating cytoskeletal influence.
Dynamic cell properties and density ratios significantly impact ACF predictions.
Abstract
The acoustic contrast factor (ACF) is calculated from the relative density and compressibility differences between a fluid and an object in the fluid. To name but one application, this acoustic contrast can be exploited using acoustophoretic systems to isolate cancer cells from a liquid biopsy, such as a blood sample. Knowing the ACF of a cancer cell represents a crucial step in the design of acoustophoretic systems for this purpose, potentially allowing the isolation of circulating cancer cells without labels or contact. For biological cells the static compressibility is different from the high frequency counterpart relevant for the ACF. In this study, we started by characterizing the ACF of low vs. high metastatic cell lines with known associated differences in phenotypic static E-modulus. The change in the static E-modulus, however, was not reflected in a change of the ACF, prompting…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Ultrasound Imaging and Elastography · 3D Printing in Biomedical Research
