Chinese Scientists Develop World’s First Instrument System for Raman-activated Cell Sorting and Sequencing
The world’s first instrument system for Raman-activated Cell Sorting and Sequencing (RACS-SEQ) was recently developed in East China’s Qingdao City, allowing functional identification, sorting and sequencing of individual cells, in a label-free manner.
of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, was released at the 20th Molecular Spectrum Conference of China and the 2018 Annual Conference of Spectroscopy on October 20.
Fluorescence-activated Cell Sorting (FACS) is the most commonly used strategy and instrument for single-cell sorting. However, cells have to be fluorescently labeled (on specific DNA, protein or metabolite biomarkers) prior to flow cytometry. Therefore, cells without known biomarkers, cells that cannot be fluorescently labeled, and cells that are not yet cultured, are all beyond the reach of FACS.
“RACS-SEQ runs in a different way,” said XU Jian, director of the at QIBEBT. “It does not require labeling of cells, which overcomes the disadvantages of FACS, and is generally applicable to the plethora of types of cells in nature.”
The system is based on the Ramanome concept and the invention of key technologies including Raman-activated Gravity-driven Cell Encapsulation (RAGE) and Raman-activated micro-Droplet cell Sorting (RADS). It consists of four functional modules, including single-cell Raman imaging, interpretation of Ramanome data for phenotype and function, and RACS-SEQ library construction for the sorted single cells.
Fig. 1. The first RACS-SEQ system, consisting of the instrument and the accessory kits, supports RACS and the directly coupled single-cell sequencing. (Image by JI Yuetong)
(Text by LIU Yang)
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E-mail: chengjing@qibebt.ac.cn