Abstract
We report a novel microfluidic system that is capable of rapidly detecting DNA and its mutants in microfluidic droplets, in addition to elucidating the dynamic hybridization process. This microfluidic picoliter droplet analysis system is able to overcome the limitations of conventional analytical techniques that utilize immobilized sensing probes on a substrate. Molecular beacon (MB), a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) molecule, was used as the DNA sensing probe in picoliter droplets. The MB-DNA duplex formation process was analyzed by the change in FRET signal, which was acquired by the time-resolved method: converting distance traveled to hybridization time. This technique demonstrates the ability to detect presence of target nucleic acids within few seconds, multiplex DNA samples in microdroplet, and distinguish single nucleotide polymorphisms. It is promising for analyzing biomolecules or reactions, such as mRNA, cells, enzymatic activity, and protein folding whose analysis requires rapid mixing and small volume.
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1 Introduction
DNA hybridization is extensively applied in medicine for diagnosing genetic diseases and gene sequencing (Livak 1999; Syvanen 2001). Analysis of DNA sequences with single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) is one of the major methods for diagnosing genetic diseases. Microarray(Lipshutz et al. 1999; van’t Veer et al. 2002), quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) (Caruso et al. 1997; Okahata et al. 1998) and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) (Thiel et al. 1997; He et al. 2000) are examples that have been developed to analyze DNA hybridization, sequencing and SNP. However, these methods are often carried out in bulk solutions with immobilized sensing probes on the substrate surface, which is dependent on the passive diffusion of DNA samples toward the sensing probes. The limited solid–liquid diffusion greatly hinders the hybridization rate of target DNA and sensing probe. Thus, the hybridization time for DNA and immobilized-probe normally takes from several hours to overnight (Peterson et al. 2001; Jobs et al. 2002). Additionally, conditions of sensing probes, such as the random immobilization density, electrostatic hindrance and the length of DNA probes on the substrate will all compromise the precision of dynamic readings (Steel et al. 2000; Peterson et al. 2001; Wong et al. 2005). Moreover, the stringent rinsing processes are also normally required after the hybridization process to remove non-specific binding. It further increases the whole process time. Therefore, it is important to develop a DNA analysis assay which is an easy, faster, accurate and low sample consumption method for multiplex DNA analysis.
Because of the small dimensions of the microfluidic system, the flows with low Reynolds number are always laminar. The diffusion distance was also greatly reduced in microfluidic channel. These unique intrinsic properties of microfluidic system contribute to the easily control of liquid behavior in microfluidic channel. Therefore, microfluidic based techniques were applied to overcome the slow hybridization problem caused by the diffusion-limited solid–liquid reaction, and further accelerate nucleic acid hybridization (Sanders and Manz 2000; Lagally et al. 2001; Sia and Whitesides 2003). Mixing in laminar flow system occurs by diffusion alone, which can result in unacceptable long mixing times (Kamholz et al. 1999; Liu et al. 2000). Moreover, uneven dispersion of DNA samples in solution and contamination on microfluidic channel surfaces can spoil accurate quantitative analysis. The DNA sample dispersion in continuous microfluidic system hinders the application of this technique for in situ multiplex DNA sample detection, and different concentrations of DNA sample analysis. Surface treatment is usually required to avoid DNA contaminants in the microfluidic channel.
The monodispersed picoliter microfluidic droplet generation system developed by our group and others (Tice et al. 2003; Tan et al. 2004; Hsieh et al. 2005; Teh et al. 2008) can serve as a promising micro-reactor for biological and chemical assays. It employs pressure-driven flow to inject aqueous solutions into aqueous immiscible solutions and form picoliter microdroplets. The biological or chemical reagents are all encapsulated in microdroplets and each droplet is isolated by the immiscible liquid (e.g. mineral oil), thus greatly reducing sample contamination on the microchannel side walls and eliminating reagent dispersion problems. The system is useful not only for DNA sample identification, but also for quantitative analysis. The liquid–liquid reaction rate of DNA hybridization in homogeneous liquid is about 40-fold faster than the hybridization rate in a solid–liquid interface (Gao et al. 2006). Hence, it is advantageous to improve the DNA sample/sensing probe hybridization rate using this technique rather than the conventional immobilized-probe approach. Compared to conventional microfluidics with continuous laminar flows, the microdroplet allows rapid mixing among reagents in droplet (Tice et al. 2003). The microdroplet formation system that we developed is capable of generating over five hundred monodisperse droplets per second with a size deviation of less than 2% (Tan et al. 2004). However, because of the fundamental differences between the microdroplet generation system and other conventional techniques, a liquid–liquid reaction based DNA sensing probe is needed to conduct DNA detection in microdroplets.
The distinctive biomolecular recognition and signal transduction capabilities of molecular beacons (MB) (Tyagi and Kramer 1996) have increasingly been applied to many medical diagnosis applications (Chen and Kwok 1997; Piatek et al. 1998) and biological assays, including genotyping for SNP (Kwok 2001; Syvanen 2001), multiplex genetic analysis (Marras et al. 1999; Vet et al. 1999), quantitative PCR (Vogelstein and Kinzler 1999; Chen et al. 2000), enzymatic reaction of proteins (Fang et al. 2000; Tung et al. 2000), and detection of mRNA in living cells (Sokol et al. 1998; Tsuji et al. 2000; Fang et al. 2002). MB is a class of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) molecules that are synthesized in a hairpin structure with stem and loop portions. The closed hairpin structure brings the donor fluorophor and quencher in close proximity to one another and thus quenches fluorescence. When the MB probes encounter complementary target DNA, the hairpin structure will open and the fluorescence is restored. The FRET mechanism is based on the non-radiative transfer of excitation from a donor fluorophor to an acceptor, and thus depends on the distance between the donor and acceptor, their relative orientation, and donor excited state lifetime. These outstanding properties enable FRET to be a sensitive label-free DNA detection probe in biological systems (Stryer and Haugland 1967; Dosremedios and Moens 1995; Deniz et al. 1999). The transition process between quenched and fluorescent states allows observation of bound and unbound target nucleic acids (Bonnet et al. 1999).
In order to achieve rapid DNA detection in homogeneous liquid phase with single nucleotide mismatch sensitivities, we used MB as the DNA sensing probe in the microdroplets. The target DNA and MB were all encapsulated in monodispersed picoliter droplet emulsions to reduce sample volume and to enhance the DNA detection efficiency. In this paper, we demonstrate a fast DNA sample and mutant detection in a few seconds, and evaluate dynamic MB-DNA duplex formation using label-free DNA analysis in microdroplet (LFDAM) system.
2 Materials and results
2.1 Wild and mutant DNA samples
It has been shown that females with abnormalities on BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes are prone to breast cancer and ovarian cancer (Shattuck-Eidens et al. 1995). The BRCA1 gene was chosen to demonstrate the rapid label-free DNA detection in the microdroplet platform. The target DNA, SynBRCA1, used in this research has the middle 21 nucleotides of the sequence of wild type BRCA1 gene. The sequence of SynBRCA1 is listed in Table 1. The MB-BRCA1 is the molecular beacon probe designed to detect SynBRCA1 existence in solution. The loop portion of MB-BRCA1 has a complementary sequence to SynBRCA1. MB-BRCA1 was synthesized with Cy3 labeled at its 5′-terminus as the fluorophor and black-hole-quencher2 (BHQ2) coupled to its 3′ terminus as the quencher for the FRET effect as shown in Fig. 1.
In order to have sensitive and selective MB probes for hybridization analyses, the designed MB is required to have a high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). SNR was calculated as
where I b, I o, and I c correspond to the intrinsic fluorescence of MB in a buffer solution alone (background), fluorescence response of a MB in the presence (open-state) or in the absence (close-state) of the DNA target, respectively. BHQ2 is a novel quencher which can greatly reduce the fluorescence from Cy3, and thus a higher SNR value can be reached. The metal ion concentrations and the pH in working buffer for MB and nucleic acids hybridization will affect the optimal SNR of MB. In addition, the charge and radius of metal ions affects the stabilization of the newly formed MB-DNA duplex (Yao and Tan 2004). In order to have strong, sensitive and accurate fluorescence signals to observe the fluorescence change of MB during nucleic acid hybridization process, the SNR of MB-BRCA1 had to be optimized to achieve maximum value. The SNR of MB-BRCA1 after hybridizing with SynBRCA1 (cDNA) was optimized by adjusting the pH and metal ion concentrations (Tyagi and Kramer 1996). The optimized buffer conditions for MB-BRCA1 and SynBRCA1 are 10 mM Tris–HCl, 5 mM MgCl2, and 50 mM KCl (Sigma-Aldrich, MO) in pH 8.3 at room temperature. All working buffers used in this research were implemented in this optimized condition, if not explicitly mentioned.
As listed in Table 1, seven different sequences of oligonucleotides were synthesized as DNA samples for evaluating the selectivity and sensitivity of the designed molecular beacon probe. The SynBRCA1 is the complementary ssDNA (cDNA) for designed molecular beacon probe (MB-BRCA1). Strands with SNP, double nucleotide polymorphism’s (2NP), and triple nucleotide polymorphism’s (3NP), have been synthesized to understand how the number of mutations affects hybridization kinetics. To further evaluate the influence of the location of mutation points on the nucleic acid, two different SNPs and 2NPs were synthesized. SNP-M and SNP-E stand for the mutation at the middle and end of SynBRCA1 sequence respectively. The sequence of 2NP-M has both mutations at the middle, and the sequence of 2NP-ME has one point mutation in the middle and the other at the end of the SynBRCA1 sequence. The 3NP has all three mutations at the middle of the SynBRCA1 sequence. Non-specific ssDNA (NS-DNA), HepCV, is 25 nucleotides long, and has a portion of the wild type Hepatitis C virus gene sequence. All oligonucleotides were acquired from Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc (Coralville, IA).
2.2 Reagents and solutions
Mineral oil (Fisher Scientific, NH) used in this experiment contains 0.5% of Sorbitan Monooleate (Sigma-Aldrich, MO). Fluo-4 (Molecular Probes, CA) and CaCl2 (Fisher Scientific, NH) were used to verify the completion of the reagent mixing time point in the droplets. Fluo-4 is a Ca2+ indicator and emits fluorescence once it meets Ca2+ ions(Gee et al. 2000). Therefore, it is used to verify mixing completion inside droplets. All water used during the experiment was purified by NANOpure Water System (Thermo Fisher Scientific, MA) with a water resistance higher than 18.2 MΩ-cm and autoclaved. All buffer components were nuclease-free, and all dilutions and centrifuge microtubes were also purified by autoclaved, nuclease-free water.
2.3 Digital microfluidic device
The microfluidic channel was fabricated in polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomer (Sylgard 184 from Dow Corning, Midland, MI) using the soft-photolithography technique (Duffy et al. 1998). PDMS has excellent transparent optical properties and does not auto-fluoresce as most plastics do (Duffy et al. 1998), making it an ideal material for fluorescence analysis platforms involving biochemical reactions. The PDMS microchannel was bonded to a microscope cover slide after surface treatment of oxygen plasma. The reagents and samples were driven into the microchannel via polymer tubing (Tygon Microbore, OH) and nanoliter precision syringe pumps (Harvard Apparatus, MA).
The schematic layout of the microfluidic droplet system for label-free DNA analysis is shown as Fig. 2. “A” is the inlet of DNA samples, e.g. SynBRCA1, SNP-M, etc., and “B” is the inlet of sensing probe, e.g. MB-BRCA1. “C” is the inlet of aqueous immiscible continuous phase, which was mineral oil in this research. “D” is the narrow multi-microchannel design to filter out PDMS debris or impurities. “E” is the break-off point, where the two merged laminar streams from A and B are broken off by shear forces from mineral oil to form microdroplets. “F” is the rapid mixing region; the U shape channel with sawtooth edges is designed to accelerate the mixing efficiency of reagents inside microdroplets. “G” is the distance marker which is used to indicate the location of droplets in the microchannel. The width and height of the microchannel in the mixing region are 50 and 75 μm respectively. The channel width was increased from 50 to 120 μm after the mixing region to reduce the droplet’s moving speed. By doing so, the fluorescence intensity during signal acquisition can increase. “H” is the MB and sample ssDNA hybridization region, and “K” is the outlet of all fluids. The total length of microchannel from mixing region to outlet is 94.5 mm.
2.4 Instrumentation
We used a monochrome high-resolution deep cooled camera (Orcaerga, Hamamatsu USA, CA) as the fluorescence detector. Another monochrome high-speed camera system (Photron USA, CA), used for observing microdroplet generation and measuring droplet velocity, was also mounted to the Olympus inverted microscope system (IX51, Olympus USA, CA). The band pass filters sets, i.e. excitation filters, dichroic beam splitters, and long-pass emission filters, for both Cy3 and FAM fluorescence detection were all purchased from Chroma (Rockingham, VT). ImagePro Plus software (MediaCybernetics Inc., MD) was used for fluorescence data analysis.
3 Results and discussion
The two streams from inlets A and B merge into the main stream, which is then cut off by shear forces from the side oil streams, resulting in the formation of monodisperse picoliter droplets at point E of Fig. 2, and it is shows in Fig. 3a. The flow rates of the DNA sample, MB and mineral oil are 1.6, 1.6 and 1.5 μl/min respectively. The DNA samples and MB are encapsulated inside the microdroplet, and while the microdroplet is traveling in the sawtooth edged serpentine channel configuration (Fig. 3b), chaotic advection flow occurs within the droplet (Song and Ismagilov 2003; Liau et al. 2005; Muradoglu and Stone 2005) and allows the DNA sample and MB-BRCA1 to mix rapidly. In Fig. 3c, we can see the droplets traveling in the “hybridization” region (I region in Fig. 2) where MB and DNA samples interact and bind to each other. The microdroplet generation rate was measured by the high-speed camera to be 377 droplets/s. The droplets are monodispersed, and the size deviation is less than 2%, as reported (Tan et al. 2006). The droplets are nominally 64 μm in diameter, or 137 picoliters in volume. In Fig. 3d, it illustrates the concepts of LFDAM system. The the DNA and MB were first encapsulated inside droplets then allowed to rapidly mix together. MB restores fluorescence after hybridizing with cDNA, and the fluorescence emits from MB was gradually increasing from the upstream to the downstream.
In order to verify completion of reagent mixing in droplets, the rapid fluorescent reaction of Fluo-4 (50 μM) and Ca2+ (150 μM) was used as an indicator under the same flow rate conditions. Once Fluo-4 meets Ca2+, it will emit strong fluorescence. This reaction time is less than a few microseconds (Gee et al. 2000) and thus negligible. The fluorescence intensity achieves a maximum and remains constant once reagents are thoroughly mixed. The mixing completion time in the droplet is T m = L m/V m, where L m is the traveled distance of the droplet from the break-off point and V m is droplet velocity measured in the mixing region. As show in Fig. 4a–c, after the tenth turn of the sawtooth edged microchannel, the Fluo-4 fluorescence saturated and remained constant thereafter. Since L m is 1,835 μm, and V m is 21,094 μm s−1, the mixing completion time T m was calculated to be 87 ms. Thus, we designate this location as the starting point of DNA sample-MB duplex formation or DNA sample-MB hybridization.
3.1 MB-DNA duplex formation evaluation
The DNA sample and MB-BRCA1 were injected into the microchannel, with concentrations of 2.5 and 1 μM respectively. Due to the monodispersity of microfluidic droplet generation, each droplet encapsulated the same number of MB and DNA. By accumulating fluorescence at one location, the fluorescence signal emitted from MB can be amplified using a longer exposure time without worrying about the change of different reaction stages. By recording fluorescence signal downstream of microchannel, MB-DNA duplex formation reaction can be observed at different stages. Droplets carrying MB-DNA duplex formation reaction stages are “captured by repeated images” and “frozen” along the microchannel.
The MB-DNA duplex formation time was converted to travelled distance. Therefore, the acquisition of reaction signals is no longer time-dependent at one location. In other words, it is time-resolved. As illustrated in Fig. 5a, the MB-DNA duplex formation time, T h is acquired from T h = L h/V h, where L h is the travel distance of the droplet from the mixing completion point and V h is the droplet velocity in hybridization region. The velocity V h is measured to be 8,723 μm s−1. It is important to note that because this system does not have to record the fluorescence change in time, it is not limited by the sensitivity and shutter speed of the sensor. The width of the observing window is 2,175 μm, and the droplet velocity is 8,723 μm s−1. Therefore, the droplet is only exposed to the excitation for 249 ms under a 4× magnification. The fluorescence image taken by the CCD sensor has 3.24 μm/pixel resolution for 4× magnification. The fluorescence image was later analyzed by ImagePro to measure fluorescence intensity. One data point equals 0.37 ms of the signal in this measurement.
From the high-speed camera measurement, we found there were 452 droplets repeated at the observation point in 1.2 s. Therefore, the fluorescence signal of MB in the droplets was amplified 452 folds in 1.2 s, as compared to only one passing fluorescent droplet. This approach can increase statistical significance; one datum represents hundreds of micro assays, and reduces assay-to-assay deviation. The fluorescence in Fig. 6a was analyzed using the vertical average-multiple-line-scan method. Each data point shown in Fig. 5b was taken as an average of 15 horizontal (x-axis) data pixels, W v = 48 μm, those at the same y-axis location. It shows fluorescence in the channel gradually increasing from the upstream to the downstream; MB gradually restores fluorescence during the hybridization process. The “g” shown in the Fig. 6b is the gap between microchannels and it is equal to 70 μm. The “d” is the diameter of microdroplet, and it is equal to 64 μm. The “w” is the width of microchannel in hybridization region, and it is equal to 120 μm. We conduct the time-resolved fluorescence measurement with horizontal average-multiple-line-scan method. Each data point shown in Fig. 7 was taken as an average of 15 vertical (y-axis) data pixels, W h = 48 μm, those at the same x-axis location, from P1 (top pixel) to P15 (bottom pixel), as shown on Fig. 5b. The total width of 15 pixels under 4× magnifications is equal to 48 μm; it covers about 75% of the droplet width which is W h as shown in Fig. 6b. We took a total of seven fluorescent area images to cover the whole mixing and hybridization regions of the device. Each area image was taken three times (n = 3), and all fluorescence images were normalized by fluorescence analysis tools (ImagePro) before signals were analyzed.
The fluorescence restoration process of MB during the duplex formation with different cDNA or mutants in microdroplet is shown in Fig. 7. The hybridization signals at the channel turns were not collected. However, the 23 ms of time lapse in each turn was counted. The time axis covers from the mixing completion point to the end of hybridization region just before the outlet reservoir. The fluorescence reaches a plateau in Region 3. The fluorescence intensity from MB remains constant at this plateau region, representing the completion of MB-DNA duplex formation. Therefore, the LFDAM device used in this research can evaluate the dynamic hybridization kinetics in less than 10 s. Faster detection rates can be reached with higher DNA concentrations.
Photobleaching of fluorophors that are labeled on DNA has been an issue in many fluorescence analyses; it typically occurs in a matter of only few microseconds to seconds (Osborne et al. 2001; Yao et al. 2003). Specifically for Cy3, photobleaching manifests in a few seconds (Eggeling et al. 1998). In this experiment, the MB passes the 4× magnification observation window as quickly as 249 ms. The time-resolve fluorescence analysis method not only reduces the photobleaching problem while monitoring the real-time reaction, but it can also compensate for the short exposure of each droplet by accumulating repeating fluorescent microdroplets at the same location. In this time-resolved approach, the fidelity of fluorescence signals can be retained.
We have also compared the reaction of MB with different mutants of SynBRCA1 samples as well as non-specific DNA. The sequences of all synthetic ssDNA samples are listed in Table 1. In Fig. 7, the measured results of different mutants are compared and it is found that the designed MB-BRCA1 is very selective and capable of distinguishing all six different mutant ssDNAs, as well as the SNP samples. The SNR values shown in Fig. 8 were acquired from the average fluorescence intensities of each ssDNA in region 3 of Fig. 7, and calculated by Eq. 1. MB with cDNA has a SNR as high as 128. The designed MB-BRCA1 is very selective in discriminating among the SNP. Moreover, it is able to discriminate the point mutation in the middle (SNP-M) or at the end (SNP-E) of the sequence. The SNR of SNP-M is 17% smaller than SNP-E. Therefore, a point mutation on the middle of SNP hinders the MB-DNA hybridization more than one at the end of sequence. Also, the SNR of 2NP-MM is 28% smaller than that of 2NP-ME. The difference between SNP-M and SNP-E is smaller than the difference between 2NP-MM and 2NP-ME. On the other hand, the SNR of 2NP-MM is 70% smaller than SNP-M. The SNR of 3NP is 58% smaller than 2NP-MM. Thus, increasing the point mutation number will reduce the SNR and adversely influence the stability and formation of MB-DNA duplex. We can therefore assume that the mutation at the middle portion has a larger affect on reducing the ability for MB to open its hairpin structure. In Fig. 7, it was also observed that the dynamic hybridization kinetics of MB-BRCA1 with SNP-M and SNP-E are closer to cDNA. The kinetics for 2NP-MM and 2NP-ME are more similar to 3NP than SNP. Since MB does not hybridize with NS-DNA, the MB doesn’t restore fluorescence and thus the SNR of non-specific DNA is close to one. The SNR of 3NP is 11 times higher than that of NS-DNA. These results show that using the microfluidic device with designed MB-BRCA1 allows for rapid and easy discrimination of DNA with different mutation points in addition to dynamic hybridization within a few seconds. It is a promising tool to further develop for genotyping assays (Dittrich and Manz 2006).
3.2 Dual DNAs detection in droplet
Dual DNAs detection in the microfluidic device was further investigated. 2.5 μM of SynBRCA1 and HepCV were mixed and injected into microchannel via inlet A, and 1 μm of MB-BRCA1 and MB-HepCV were mixed and injected into the microchannel via inlet B. The sequence of MB-HepCV is listed in Table 1. SynBRCA1, HepCV, MB-BRCA1, and MB-HepCV were all encapsulated in microdroplet and rapidly mixed. The emitting fluorescence from microdroplet includes Cy3 from MB-BRCA1 and FAM from MB-HepCV. The fluorescence was measured by specific filter sets with different band pass for Cy3 or FAM. As shown in Fig. 8, the HepCV (NS-DNA) did not interact with MB-BRCA1 with SNR equal to background of MB-BRCA1. Figure 9 shows that the measured Cy3 and FAM fluorescence from MB-BRCA1 and MB-HepCV in microdroplet has SNR 125, and 136, respectively.
3.3 Dynamic range of linearity
The sensitivity of this label-free DNA detection in picoliter droplet system was characterized by analyzing different concentrations of SynBRCA1. Different concentrations (125, 250 and 500 nM, 1, 1.5 and 2 μM) of SynBRCA1 and 2 μM of MB were encapsulated in each microdroplet. The MB-BRCA1 restored fluorescence after it fully hybridized with SynBRCA1. The SynBRCA1 detection by MB-BRCA1 was conducted by taking fluorescence signal at the end of hybridization region (“J” in Fig. 2) with 1.2 s of fluorescence acquisition. As shown in Fig. 10, 2 μm SynBRCA1 has SNR as high as 125. The best-fitting curve (dashed-line) shows a strongly linear relation between SNR and DNA concentration from 125 nM to 2 μM. Detection of DNA concentrations above MB concentration (2 μM in this study) is possible but highly non-linear. On the other hand, a signal of DNA concentration below 125 nM was insignificant when compared to the noise of MB (2 μM). Therefore, detection below 125 nM could only be accomplished if a lower concentration of MB was used. 500 fM of DNA was detected when 2.5 nM MB was used. These results suggest that the use of MB in the microfluidic device can rapidly (within 10 s) detect not only presence, but also concentration of target DNAs. An even faster detection may be achieved since hybridization in region 1 of Fig. 7 is already distinguishable among different DNA samples.
The folding–unfolding transitions of the hairpin-structured molecular beacon (MB) are dependent on the following parameters: the length of the loop portion, the loop sequence, and the activation energies of the open-close transitions. The conformational fluctuation kinetics of the DNA hairpin-loop are very fast, and the opening and closing transition in the MB has been reported in the microseconds range (Bonnet et al. 1998). In the beginning of region 1, MB is in the closed state, and MB and target DNA are in close proximity to each other. As the base-pairing increases in number, the intermolecular forces increase as well. As soon as the intermolecular forces become larger than the intramolecular forces at the stem, the hairpin structure starts to open and frees the fluorescence from the fluorophor. As the base-pairing process continues, the distance of donor fluorophor and acceptor fluorophor (quencher) gradually increases, and the fluorescence is restored while the FRET phenomenon ceases (Stryer 1978; Jares-Erijman and Jovin 2003). Instability of the hairpin structure of the MB-DNA duplex induces the association or dissociation transmission during this stage of the hybridization process. The MB-DNA duplex formation can be considered to have the open/close conformational fluctuation of a typical of hairpin MB fluorescence restoring (Bonnet et al. 1998; Yao et al. 2003). The open/close fluctuation rate of MB-DNA varied with different sequences of DNA. The MB-DNA duplex has several cycles of conformational changes in open and close states. The more stable the MB-DNA duplex, the stronger the MB fluorescence restored. The measured fluorescence in droplet can be expressed as Eq. 2.
F is the total fluorescence intensity measured, I c is the background MB fluorescence in its closed state, I o is the restored fluorescence in its open state (von Ahsen et al. 1999), N is the time when MB is in open state, and (t − N) is the time MB is in closed state. C is the concentration of complementary DNA under the assumption that the concentration of MB is higher than the sample. V is the volume of droplet and f is the number of droplets passing through the observation window in 1-s. T is the total CCD sensor data collection time and t is the time for a droplet to pass one sensor pixel of the CCD camera; t = d/s where d is the distance of one pixel and s is the droplet traveling velocity in the hybridization region. Also, k is the correction constant which is related to light intensity. Using 4× magnification and fluorescence acquisition for 1.2 s, one droplet will take 0.37 ms to pass through one pixel on the CCD sensor. Equation 2 can be rewritten as Eq. 3
The measured fluorescence intensity is directly proportional to sample concentration, droplet volume, droplet generation rate, and fluorescence acquisition time . The selection of donor fluorophor will affect the value of I o, and the selection of quencher will affect the value of I c . The value of N is inversely proportional to the number of mutation points. In other words, these results disclose the characteristic probability of MB-BRCA1 closing and opening for different mutations of SynBRCA1.
The LFDAM microfluidic device demonstrates the ability to localize MB with DNA samples in picoliter droplets and not only detect mutants in a few seconds, but also evaluate the different hybridization kinetics between mutants. It was also observed that higher concentrations of target DNA and MB probe in microdroplets cause higher rates of fluorescence increase; or, larger Δf/Δt in Fig. 7, where Δf is the fluorescence change in period of time Δt. Equation 4 describes the time required for MB to meet DNA in microdroplet after mixing. It can be applied by diffusion based DNA transport in solution.
τ is the time required for a molecule to diffuse over distance χ, and D is the diffusion coefficient of DNA. The typical value of D is of 9.948 × 10E − 7 cm2 s−1 (for 18-base ssDNA)(Nkodo et al. 2001). The diameter of the microdroplet is 64 μm and volume is 137 picoliter. Since the concentration of DNA (1.25 μM) is higher than MB (0.5 μM), the average distance of MB and DNA is determined by DNA. The average DNA number in one droplet is 1031.3 × 105. If we do not consider the size of molecules, the average distance of MB and DNA is 11.9 nm. Therefore, the time required for MB to meet DNA is approximately 0.7 ms; thus, the diffusion time is so fast after mixing, it can be ignored.
4 Conclusion
We have developed a LFDAM system for using FRET molecules to rapidly detect DNA in Microdroplets and also capable evaluate the dynamic hybridization process through a time-resolved method. Because convection-driven mixing occurs in picoliter microdroplets, the often lengthy diffusion time in bulk solution or non-droplet microfluidic channels is greatly reduced. Consequently, the reoccurring identical droplets represent the hybridization stage via fluorescent signals, and the different reaction stages in droplets were shown at different traveling distances. The reaction time correlates to the distance traveled by the droplets in the microchannel. Since each droplet is exposed to excitation source for only 249 ms, the photobleaching problem was reduced to a minimum. The designed MB-BRCA1 for SynBRCA1 detection can reach a SNR as high as 128 demonstrating LFDAM as a sensitive platform to distinguish SNP point mutation at various sites and elicit the difference of their hybridization kinetics. Duplex target detection in one microdroplet was demonstrated by analyzing SynBRCA1 and HepCV in LFDAM. The limitation of detection in LFDAM with MB can reach as low as 500 fM. This microdroplet array and molecular beacon based system, LFDAM, is promising for high-throughput genotyping of SNPs in pharmacogenomics research, where the identification of variations in specific genes is necessary to evaluate drug efficacy, toxicity and metabolism. It will be useful for establishing optimal therapeutic strategies for individual patients. LFDAM may also be used to analyze other rapid biomolecular reactions, such as enzymatic activity, multiplex nucleic acid detection, cells, RNA, and proteins folding whose analyses require small volume, rapid mixing, and minimum effect of photobleaching.
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Acknowledgments
The authors would like to gratefully acknowledge Yuh Adam Lin, Professor James Brody, Joseph Harris, Alan Lee, and Wajeeh Saadi of the Biomedical Engineering Department, University of California, Irvine for their precious suggestions and generosity in letting us use their lab equipments. This research was funded by Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) under the MF3 N/MEMS S&T Centers (HR001106-1-0050), and NASA through the University Affiliated Research Center (NAS2-03144).
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Open Access This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0), which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
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Hsieh, A.TH., Pan, P.JH. & Lee, A.P. Rapid label-free DNA analysis in picoliter microfluidic droplets using FRET probes. Microfluid Nanofluid 6, 391–401 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10404-009-0406-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10404-009-0406-9