| Literature DB >> 29784937 |
Christian A Siltanen1, Russell H Cole1, Sean Poust1, Lawrence Chao2, Jabus Tyerman2,3, Benjamin Kaufmann-Malaga2, Jeff Ubersax2, Zev J Gartner4,5, Adam R Abate6,7.
Abstract
Droplet microfluidics enables massively-parallel analysis of single cells, biomolecules, and chemicals, making it valuable for high-throughput screens. However, many hydrophobic analytes are soluble in carrier oils, preventing their quantitative analysis with the method. We apply Printed Droplet Microfluidics to construct defined reactions with chemicals and cells incubated under air on an open array. The method interfaces with most bioanalytical tools and retains hydrophobic compounds in compartmentalized reactors, allowing their quantitation.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29784937 PMCID: PMC5962535 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-25577-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Synthetic yeast library printing and screening scheme. (a) Single yeast cells are encapsulated and incubated in picoliter droplets to generate a suspension of isogenic colonies. Droplets are interrogated in a microfluidic droplet sorter and dispensed to a microwell array based on user-defined gating parameters. (b) The microwell array substrate is registered to microelectrodes, creating dielectrophoretic traps that pull droplets into nanoliter wells, where multiple droplets can be combined. After printing isogenic colonies, each well can be supplemented with droplets containing assay reagents or fresh culture media. Printing oil is removed and the cells cultured under humidified air for growth and subsequent assay.
Figure 2Isogenic colony expansion and detection using fluorescence and absorbance activated droplet sorting (FAADS). (a) To illustrate FAADS analysis, yeast cells are encapsulated in unstained droplets and mixed with a separate emulsion of fresh media (red). (b) The mixed emulsion is injected into the PDM chip where droplets flow through an interrogation channel consisting of a light source-coupled fiber and two detection fibers registered to PMTs. (c) PMT voltage time traces are measured to identify signal peaks in droplet fluorescence and absorbance, where colonies cause a density-dependent decrease in transmittance. (d) Droplet fluorescence is plotted versus time-averaged transmittance, and the clusters gated for dispensing. Scale bars = 75 μm.
Figure 3On-chip culture and farnesene bioassay. (a) A mixed emulsion of engineered isogenic yeast colonies is loaded into the PDM chip and printed. (b) Y colonies (unlabeled) are printed next to Y colonies (blue dye labeled). In a subsequent step, all wells are supplemented with fresh media (red dye labeled) to initiate farnesene production. (c) Yeast colonies proliferate in culture under humidified air. (d) Printed yeast colonies are encased in PEG hydrogel by adding droplets containing crosslinkable polymer. Secreted farnesene accumulates in the gelled wells, allowing a miscible Nile Red solution to be added while maintaining compartmentalization, showing a 5-fold increase in Y signal (p < 0.002). Scale bars = 1 mm in (b) and (c), and 400 μm in (d).