Robert H. Austin

Find an error

Name: Austin, Robert
Organization: Princeton University , USA
Department: Guillaume Lambert and Robert H. Austin are at the Department of Physics
Title: (PhD)
Co-reporter:Robert H. Austin;Huan Hu;Sung-Cheol Kim;Gustavo Stolovitzky;Joshua T. Smith;Benjamin H. Wunsch
PNAS 2017 Volume 114 (Issue 26 ) pp:E5034-E5041
Publication Date(Web):2017-06-27
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1706645114
Deterministic lateral displacement (DLD) is a technique for size fractionation of particles in continuous flow that has shown great potential for biological applications. Several theoretical models have been proposed, but experimental evidence has demonstrated that a rich class of intermediate migration behavior exists, which is not predicted. We present a unified theoretical framework to infer the path of particles in the whole array on the basis of trajectories in a unit cell. This framework explains many of the unexpected particle trajectories reported and can be used to design arrays for even nanoscale particle fractionation. We performed experiments that verify these predictions and used our model to develop a condenser array that achieves full particle separation with a single fluidic input.
Co-reporter:Jeonghun Han;Yukyung Jun;So Hyun Kim;Hong-Hoa Hoang;Suyeon Kim;Yeonjoo Jung;Sanghyuk Lee;Sungsu Park;Jaesang Kim
PNAS 2016 Volume 113 (Issue 50 ) pp:14283-14288
Publication Date(Web):2016-12-13
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1614898113
In vitro prediction of the probable rapid emergence of resistance to a drug in tumors could act to winnow out potential candidates for further costly development. We have developed a microfluidic device consisting of ∼500 hexagonal microcompartments that provides a complex ecology with wide ranges of drug and nutrient gradients and local populations. This ecology of a fragmented metapopulation induced the drug resistance in stage IV U87 glioblastoma cells to doxorubicin in 7 d. Exome and transcriptome sequencing of the resistant cells identified mutations and differentially expressed genes. Gene ontology and pathway analyses of the genes identified showed that they were functionally relevant to the established mechanisms of doxorubicin action. Specifically, we identified (i) a frame-shift insertion in the filamin-A gene, which regulates the influx and efflux of topoisomerase II poisons; (ii) the overexpression of aldo-keto reductase enzymes, which convert doxorubicin into doxorubicinol; and (iii) activation of NF-κB via alterations in the nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptor signaling pathway from mutations in three genes (CARD6, NSD1, and NLRP13) and the overexpression of inflammatory cytokines. Functional experiments support the in silico analyses and, together, demonstrate the effects of these genetic changes. Our findings suggest that, given the rapid evolution of resistance and the focused response, this technology could act as a rapid screening modality for genetic aberrations leading to resistance to chemotherapy as well as counter selection of drugs unlikely to be successful ultimately.
Co-reporter:Weijing Han;Shaohua Chen;Wei Yuan;Qihui Fan;Jianxiang Tian;Xiaochen Wang;Longqing Chen;Weili Wei;Xixiang Zhang;Ruchuan Liu;Junle Qu;Yang Jiao;Liyu Liu
PNAS 2016 Volume 113 (Issue 40 ) pp:11208-11213
Publication Date(Web):2016-10-04
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1610347113
In this work, we constructed a Collagen I–Matrigel composite extracellular matrix (ECM). The composite ECM was used to determine the influence of the local collagen fiber orientation on the collective intravasation ability of tumor cells. We found that the local fiber alignment enhanced cell–ECM interactions. Specifically, metastatic MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells followed the local fiber alignment direction during the intravasation into rigid Matrigel (∼10 mg/mL protein concentration).
Co-reporter:Amy Wu;Qiucen Zhang;Guillaume Lambert;Zayar Khin;Robert A. Gatenby;Hyunsung John Kim;Nader Pourmand;Kimberly Bussey;Paul C. W. Davies;James C. Sturm
PNAS 2015 Volume 112 (Issue 33 ) pp:10467-10472
Publication Date(Web):2015-08-18
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1512396112
We use a microfabricated ecology with a doxorubicin gradient and population fragmentation to produce a strong Darwinian selective pressure that drives forward the rapid emergence of doxorubicin resistance in multiple myeloma (MM) cancer cells. RNA sequencing of the resistant cells was used to examine (i) emergence of genes with high de novo substitution densities (i.e., hot genes) and (ii) genes never substituted (i.e., cold genes). The set of cold genes, which were 21% of the genes sequenced, were further winnowed down by examining excess expression levels. Both the most highly substituted genes and the most highly expressed never-substituted genes were biased in age toward the most ancient of genes. This would support the model that cancer represents a revision back to ancient forms of life adapted to high fitness under extreme stress, and suggests that these ancient genes may be targets for cancer therapy.
Co-reporter:Qiucen Zhang;Julia Bos;Saurabh Vyawahare;Elizabeth Rogers;Susan M. Rosenberg
PNAS 2015 Volume 112 (Issue 1 ) pp:178-183
Publication Date(Web):2015-01-06
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1420702111
Bacteria can rapidly evolve resistance to antibiotics via the SOS response, a state of high-activity DNA repair and mutagenesis. We explore here the first steps of this evolution in the bacterium Escherichia coli. Induction of the SOS response by the genotoxic antibiotic ciprofloxacin changes the E. coli rod shape into multichromosome-containing filaments. We show that at subminimal inhibitory concentrations of ciprofloxacin the bacterial filament divides asymmetrically repeatedly at the tip. Chromosome-containing buds are made that, if resistant, propagate nonfilamenting progeny with enhanced resistance to ciprofloxacin as the parent filament dies. We propose that the multinucleated filament creates an environmental niche where evolution can proceed via generation of improved mutant chromosomes due to the mutagenic SOS response and possible recombination of the new alleles between chromosomes. Our data provide a better understanding of the processes underlying the origin of resistance at the single-cell level and suggest an analogous role to the eukaryotic aneuploidy condition in cancer.
Co-reporter:Amy Wu;Kevin Loutherback;Guillaume Lambert;Luis Estévez-Salmerón;Thea D. Tlsty;James C. Sturm;
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2013 110(40) pp:16103-16108
Publication Date(Web):September 17, 2013
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1314385110
The emergence of resistance to chemotherapy by cancer cells, when combined with metastasis, is the primary driver of mortality in cancer and has proven to be refractory to many efforts. Theory and computer modeling suggest that the rate of emergence of resistance is driven by the strong selective pressure of mutagenic chemotherapy and enhanced by the motility of mutant cells in a chemotherapy gradient to areas of higher drug concentration and lower population competition. To test these models, we constructed a synthetic microecology which superposed a mutagenic doxorubicin gradient across a population of motile, metastatic breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231). We observed the emergence of MDA-MB-231 cancer cells capable of proliferation at 200 nM doxorubicin in this complex microecology. Individual cell tracking showed both movement of the MDA-MB-231 cancer cells toward higher drug concentrations and proliferation of the cells at the highest doxorubicin concentrations within 72 h, showing the importance of both motility and drug gradients in the emergence of resistance.
Co-reporter:Liyu Liu;Guillaume Duclos;Bo Sun;Jeongseog Lee;Amy Wu;Yoonseok Kam;Eduardo D. Sontag;Howard A. Stone;James C. Sturm;Robert A. Gatenby
PNAS 2013 110 (5 ) pp:1686-1691
Publication Date(Web):2013-01-29
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1221147110
Metastasis, the truly lethal aspect of cancer, occurs when metastatic cancer cells in a tumor break through the basement membrane and penetrate the extracellular matrix. We show that MDA-MB-231 metastatic breast cancer cells cooperatively invade a 3D collagen matrix while following a glucose gradient. The invasion front of the cells is a dynamic one, with different cells assuming the lead on a time scale of 70 h. The front cell leadership is dynamic presumably because of metabolic costs associated with a long-range strain field that precedes the invading cell front, which we have imaged using confocal imaging and marker beads imbedded in the collagen matrix. We suggest this could be a quantitative assay for an invasive phenotype tracking a glucose gradient and show that the invading cells act in a cooperative manner by exchanging leaders in the invading front.
Co-reporter:Guillaume Lambert, Luis Estévez-Salmeron, Steve Oh, David Liao, Beverly M. Emerson, Thea D. Tlsty & Robert H. Austin
Nature Reviews Cancer 2011 11(5) pp:375
Publication Date(Web):2011-04-21
DOI:10.1038/nrc3039
Cancer cells rapidly evolve drug resistance through somatic evolution and, in order to continue growth in the metastatic phase, violate the organism-wide consensus of regulated growth and beneficial communal interactions. We suggest that there is a fundamental mechanistic connection between the rapid evolution of resistance to chemotherapy in cellular communities within malignant tissues and the rapid evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacterial communities. We propose that this evolution is the result of a programmed and collective stress response performed by interacting cells, and that, given this fundamental connection, studying bacterial communities can provide deeper insights into the dynamics of adaptation and the evolution of cells within tumours.
Co-reporter:Qiucen Zhang, Kristelle Robin, David Liao, Guillaume Lambert, and Robert H. Austin
Molecular Pharmaceutics 2011 Volume 8(Issue 6) pp:2063-2068
Publication Date(Web):November 15, 2011
DOI:10.1021/mp200274r
We have designed and fabricated a microecology to mimic a naturally occurring bacterial culture, which includes the stress gradient, metapopulation, and cellular motility. In this microecology, we show that it is possible to fix the resistance to the mutagenic antibiotic Ciprofloxacin in wild-type Escherichia coli within 10 h. We found the evolution of resistance is further accelerated in microecology if bacteria have already acquired the phenotype of growth advantage at the stationary phase (GASP).Keywords: antibiotics; evolution; resistance;
Co-reporter:Hyunsung Kim;Guillaume Lambert;David Liao;Qiucen Zhang;Nader Pourmand;Kristelle Robin;Chih-kuan Tung
Science 2011 Volume 333(Issue 6050) pp:1764-1767
Publication Date(Web):23 Sep 2011
DOI:10.1126/science.1208747

Gradients of antibiotics generated in a microfluidic device provoke selection of ciprofloxacin resistance in Escherichia coli.

Co-reporter:Liyu Liu;Koh-Meng Aw Yong;Howard A. Stone;Bo Sun;Robert H. Getzenberg;Jonas N. Pedersen
PNAS 2011 Volume 108 (Issue 17 ) pp:6853-6856
Publication Date(Web):2011-04-26
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1102808108
The metastatic invasion of cancer cells from primary tumors to distant ecological niches, rather than the primary tumors, is the cause of much cancer mortality [Zhang QB, et al. (2010) Int J Cancer 126:2534–2541; Chambers AF, Goss PE (2008) Breast Cancer Res 10:114]. Metastasis is a three-dimensional invasion process where cells spread from their site of origin and colonize distant microenvironmental niches. It is critical to be able to assess quantitatively the metastatic potential of cancer cells [Harma V, et al. (2010) PLoS ONE 5:e10431]. We have constructed a microfabricated chip with a three-dimensional topology consisting of lowlands and isolated square highlands (Tepuis), which stand hundreds of microns above the lowlands, in order to assess cancer cell metastatic potential as they invade the highlands. As a test case, the invasive ascents of the Tepui by highly metastatic PC-3 and noninvasive LNCaP prostate cancer cells were used. The vertical ascent by prostate cancer cells from the lowlands to the tops of the Tepui was imaged using confocal microscopy and used as a measure of the relative invasiveness. The less-metastatic cells (LNCaP) never populated all available tops, leaving about 15% of them unoccupied, whereas the more metastatic PC-3 cells occupied all available Tepuis. We argue that this distinct difference in invasiveness is due to contact inhibition.
Co-reporter:Robert H. Austin, Chih-kuan Tung, Guillaume Lambert, David Liao and Xiuqing Gong  
Chemical Society Reviews 2010 vol. 39(Issue 3) pp:1049-1059
Publication Date(Web):08 Feb 2010
DOI:10.1039/B911230H
Bacterial systems offer excellent tests of how well the general theoretical predictions of ecology dynamics do or do not in fact conform to reality. We believe that the basic rules that govern the cohabitation of competing species for limited resources are the same from bacteria to man, we just don't know the rules, and that fundamental studies of the games bacteria play will give fundamental insight into the vastly more complex systems we hope to attack later. In this tutorial review we discuss how simplified micro-ecologies constructed using tools of micro and nanofabrication techniques offer some idea of how physical principles and analysis can address the issue of complex ecology dynamics.
Co-reporter:Keith J. Morton;Kevin Loutherback;David W. Inglis;James C. Sturm;Ophelia K. Tsui;Stephen Y. Chou
PNAS 2008 Volume 105 (Issue 21 ) pp:7434-7438
Publication Date(Web):2008-05-27
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0712398105
We show that it is possible to direct particles entrained in a fluid along trajectories much like rays of light in classical optics. A microstructured, asymmetric post array forms the core hydrodynamic element and is used as a building block to construct microfluidic metamaterials and to demonstrate refractive, focusing, and dispersive pathways for flowing beads and cells. The core element is based on the concept of deterministic lateral displacement where particles choose different paths through the asymmetric array based on their size: Particles larger than a critical size are displaced laterally at each row by a post and move along the asymmetric axis at an angle to the flow, while smaller particles move along streamline paths. We create compound elements with complex particle handling modes by tiling this core element using multiple transformation operations; we show that particle trajectories can be bent at an interface between two elements and that particles can be focused into hydrodynamic jets by using a single inlet port. Although particles propagate through these elements in a way that strongly resembles light rays propagating through optical elements, there are unique differences in the paths of our particles as compared with photons. The unusual aspects of these modular, microfluidic metamaterials form a rich design toolkit for mixing, separating, and analyzing cells and functional beads on-chip.
Co-reporter:Jason Puchalla;Kelly Krantz;Hays Rye;Robert Austin
PNAS 2008 Volume 105 (Issue 38 ) pp:14400-14405
Publication Date(Web):2008-09-23
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0805969105
Many essential cellular functions depend on the assembly and disassembly of macromolecular complexes. The size, form, and distribution of these assemblies can be heterogeneous and complex, rendering their detailed characterization difficult. Here we describe a simple non-correlation-based method capable of directly measuring population distributions at very low sample concentrations. Specifically, we exploit the highest signal-to-noise light bursts from single fluorescent particles transiting a confocal excitation spot to recursively determine the brightness and size distribution of complex mixtures of fluorescent objects. We refer to this method as burst analysis spectroscopy (BAS) and demonstrate the sensitivity of this technique by examining the free-solution, time-resolved distribution of assembled protein aggregates by using two fluorescently labeled proteins: the aggregation-prone, chaperonin-dependent, folding model protein ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO), and an amyloidogenic fragment of the yeast prion protein Sup35. We find that the assembly kinetics of both proteins display complex multimodal behavior not readily quantifiable with other methods.
Co-reporter:Robert H. Austin;Shuang-fang Lim
PNAS 2008 Volume 105 (Issue 45 ) pp:17217-17221
Publication Date(Web):2008-11-11
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0709499105
The Sackler Colloquium entitled “Nanomaterials in Biology and Medicine: Promises and Perils” was held on April 10–11, 2007. We have been able to assemble a representative sampling of 17 of the invited talks ranging over the topics presented. Any new technology carries with it both a promise of transforming the way we do things and the possibility that there are unforeseen consequences. The papers collected here represent a cross-section of these issues. As an example, we present our own work on nano-upconversion phosphors as an example of this new class of nanomaterials with potential use in medicine and biology.
Co-reporter:John A. Davis;David W. Inglis;Keith J. Morton;David A. Lawrence;Lotien R. Huang;Stephen Y. Chou;James C. Sturm;
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2006 103(40) pp:14779-14784
Publication Date(Web):September 25, 2006
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0605967103
We show the fractionation of whole blood components and isolation of blood plasma with no dilution by using a continuous-flow deterministic array that separates blood components by their hydrodynamic size, independent of their mass. We use the technology we developed of deterministic arrays which separate white blood cells, red blood cells, and platelets from blood plasma at flow velocities of 1,000 μm/sec and volume rates up to 1 μl/min. We verified by flow cytometry that an array using focused injection removed 100% of the lymphocytes and monocytes from the main red blood cell and platelet stream. Using a second design, we demonstrated the separation of blood plasma from the blood cells (white, red, and platelets) with virtually no dilution of the plasma and no cellular contamination of the plasma.
Co-reporter:Jason Puchalla, Daniel Adamek, Robert Austin
Chemical Physics 2004 Volume 307(2–3) pp:285-290
Publication Date(Web):27 December 2004
DOI:10.1016/j.chemphys.2004.09.006

Abstract

We present a way to observe time-resolved heat release using a laminar flow diffusional mixer coupled with a highly sensitive infrared camera which measures the temperature change of the solvent. There are significant benefits to the use of laminar flow mixers for time-resolved calorimetry: (1) The thermal signal can be made position and time-stationary to allow for signal integration; (2) Extremely small volumes (nl/s) of sample are required for a measurement; (3) The same mixing environment can be observed spectroscopically to obtain state occupation information; (4) The mixer allows one to do out of equilibrium dynamic studies. The hope is that these measurements will allow us probe the non-equilibrium thermodynamics as a protein moves along a free energy trajectory from one state to another.

Co-reporter:Jonas O. Tegenfeldt;Han Cao;Steven Chou;Walter W. Reisner;Christelle Prinz;Yan Mei Wang;Pascal Silberzan;Robert Riehn;James C. Sturm;Edward C. Cox
PNAS 2004 Volume 101 (Issue 30 ) pp:10979-10983
Publication Date(Web):2004-07-27
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0403849101
We show that genomic-length DNA molecules imaged in nanochannels have an extension along the channel that scales linearly with the contour length of the polymer, in agreement with the scaling arguments developed by de Gennes for self-avoiding confined polymers. This fundamental relationship allows us to measure directly the contour length of single DNA molecules confined in the channels, and the statistical analysis of the dynamics of the polymer in the nanochannel allows us to compute the SD of the mean of the extension. This statistical analysis allows us to measure the extension of λ DNA multimers with a 130-nm SD in 1 min.
Co-reporter:Hai Lin;Sungsu Park;Peter M. Wolanin;Emil A. Yuzbashyan;Nicholas C. Darnton;Jeffry B. Stock;Pascal Silberzan;Robert Austin
PNAS 2003 Volume 100 (Issue 24 ) pp:13910-13915
Publication Date(Web):2003-11-25
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1935975100
The environmental topology of complex structures is used by Escherichia coli to create traveling waves of high cell density, a prelude to quorum sensing. When cells are grown to a moderate density within a confining microenvironment, these traveling waves of cell density allow the cells to find and collapse into confining topologies, which are unstable to population fluctuations above a critical threshold. This was first observed in mazes designed to mimic complex environments, then more clearly in a simpler geometry consisting of a large open area surrounding a square (250 × 250 μm) with a narrow opening of 10–30 μm. Our results thus show that under nutrient-deprived conditions bacteria search out each other in a collective manner and that the bacteria can dynamically confine themselves to highly enclosed spaces.
Co-reporter:Robert Austin
Physics of Life Reviews (September 2013) Volume 10(Issue 3) pp:324-325
Publication Date(Web):1 September 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.plrev.2013.07.006
Co-reporter:Robert H. Austin
Physics of Life Reviews (June 2011) Volume 8(Issue 2) pp:165-166
Publication Date(Web):1 June 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.plrev.2011.05.013
Co-reporter:Saurabh Vyawahare, Qiucen Zhang, Alexandra Lau, Robert H. Austin
Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews (20 April 2014) Volumes 69–70() pp:217-224
Publication Date(Web):20 April 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.addr.2014.02.005
Drug development faces its nemesis in the form of drug resistance. The rate of bacterial resistance to antibiotics, or tumor resistance to chemotherapy decisively depends on the surrounding heterogeneous tissue. However, in vitro drug testing is almost exclusively done in well stirred, homogeneous environments. Recent advancements in microfluidics and microfabrication introduce opportunities to develop in vitro culture models that mimic the complex in vivo tissue environment. In this review, we will first discuss the design principles underlying such models. Then we will demonstrate two types of microfluidic devices that combine stressor gradients, cell motility, large population of competing/cooperative cells and time varying dosage of drugs. By incorporating ideas from how natural selection and evolution move drug resistance forward, we show that drug resistance can occur at much greater rates than in well-stirred environments. Finally, we will discuss the future direction of in vitro microbial culture models and how to extend the lessons learned from microbial systems to eukaryotic cells.Download high-res image (236KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Robert H. Austin, Chih-kuan Tung, Guillaume Lambert, David Liao and Xiuqing Gong
Chemical Society Reviews 2010 - vol. 39(Issue 3) pp:NaN1059-1059
Publication Date(Web):2010/02/08
DOI:10.1039/B911230H
Bacterial systems offer excellent tests of how well the general theoretical predictions of ecology dynamics do or do not in fact conform to reality. We believe that the basic rules that govern the cohabitation of competing species for limited resources are the same from bacteria to man, we just don't know the rules, and that fundamental studies of the games bacteria play will give fundamental insight into the vastly more complex systems we hope to attack later. In this tutorial review we discuss how simplified micro-ecologies constructed using tools of micro and nanofabrication techniques offer some idea of how physical principles and analysis can address the issue of complex ecology dynamics.
Ferrate(4-),hexakis(cyano-kC)-,(OC-6-11)- (9CI)
Cytochrome C
Deoxyribonuclease
tert-butyl-m-xylene
Poly[oxy(1-methyl-2-oxo-1,2-ethanediyl)], α-hydro-ω-hydroxy-, ester with α-methyl-ω-hydroxypoly(oxy-1,2-ethanediyl), diblock
sodium yttrium(3+) tetrafluoride
Adriamycin