Table 3.
FACS-Based | Microfluidics-Based |
---|---|
The utility of FACS assays is limited to fluorophores that remain inside or on the surface of cells | The utility of microfluidics is broadened to components that are secreted |
Water-in-oil emulsions must be converted into a water-in-oil-in-water emulsion (double emulsion) | Water-in-oil emulsions can be sorted directly |
Pre-formed droplets are difficult to manipulate (restricted range of assays) | Pre-formed droplets are easy to manipulate: they can be divided, fused, incubated, analyzed, sorted, broken up |
Limited control over the reaction conditions in a droplet | Much greater control over the reaction conditions in a droplet |
Lack of control over the droplet volume, leading to polydispersity | Good control over the droplet volume, highly monodisperse |
Requires standard cell sorters | Requires specialized instrumentation |
Sorting speed up to 20,000 droplets/s | Sorting speed up to 2000 droplets/s |
FACS—fluorescence-assisted cell sorting.