Literature DB >> 26435065

Self-Assembled Pico-Liter Droplet Microarray for Ultrasensitive Nucleic Acid Quantification.

Tony M Yen1, Tiantian Zhang2, Ping-Wei Chen3, Ti-Hsuan Ku4, Yu-Jui Chiu2, Ian Lian5, Yu-Hwa Lo4.   

Abstract

Nucleic acid detection and quantification technologies have made remarkable progress in recent years. Among existing platforms, hybridization-based assays have the advantages of being amplification free, low instrument cost, and high throughput, but are generally less sensitive compared to sequencing and PCR assays. To bridge this performance gap, we developed a quantitative physical model for the hybridization-based assay to guide the experimental design, which leads to a pico-liter droplet environment with drastically enhanced performance and detection limit several order above any current microarray platform. The pico-liter droplet hybridization platform is further coupled with the on-chip enrichment technique to yield ultrahigh sensitivity both in terms of target concentration and copy number. Our physical model, taking into account of molecular transport, electrostatic intermolecular interactions, reaction kinetics, suggests that reducing liquid height and optimizing target concentration will maximize the hybridization efficiency, and both conditions can be satisfied in a highly parallel, self-assembled pico-liter droplet microarray that produces a detection limit as low as 570 copies and 50 aM. The pico-liter droplet array device is realized with a micropatterned superhydrophobic black silicon surface that allows enrichment of nucleic acid samples by position-defined evaporation. With on-chip enrichment and oil encapsulated pico-liter droplet arrays, we have demonstrated a record high sensitivity, wide dynamic range (6 orders of magnitude), and marked reduction of hybridization time from >10 h to <5 min in a highly repeatable fashion, benefiting from the physics-driven design and nanofeatures of the device. The design principle and technology can contribute to biomedical sensing and point-of-care clinical applications such as pathogen detection and cancer diagnosis and prognosis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  amplification-free; biophysics; hybridization efficiency; microarray; nucleic acid sensing; pico-liter; self-assembly

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26435065     DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b03848

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  4 in total

1.  Microfluidic approaches for cell-based molecular diagnosis.

Authors:  Dong Jun Lee; John Mai; Tony Jun Huang
Journal:  Biomicrofluidics       Date:  2018-09-14       Impact factor: 2.800

2.  Counting Proteins in Single Cells with Addressable Droplet Microarrays.

Authors:  Stelios Chatzimichail; Pashiini Supramaniam; Oscar Ces; Ali Salehi-Reyhani
Journal:  J Vis Exp       Date:  2018-07-06       Impact factor: 1.355

3.  Asymmetric Membrane for Digital Detection of Single Bacteria in Milliliters of Complex Water Samples.

Authors:  Xingyu Lin; Xiao Huang; Yanzhe Zhu; Katharina Urmann; Xing Xie; Michael R Hoffmann
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2018-09-19       Impact factor: 15.881

4.  Digital Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification on a Commercial Membrane.

Authors:  Xingyu Lin; Xiao Huang; Katharina Urmann; Xing Xie; Michael R Hoffmann
Journal:  ACS Sens       Date:  2019-01-15       Impact factor: 7.711

  4 in total

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