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Droplet-based Multi-volume Digital PCR by Surface Assisted Multifactor Fluid Segmentation Approach Wen-Wen Liu, Ying Zhu, Yi-Ming Feng, Jin Fang, and Qun Fang Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.6b03687 • Publication Date (Web): 30 Nov 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 6, 2016
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Analytical Chemistry
Droplet-based Multi-volume Digital PCR by Surface Assisted Multifactor Fluid Segmentation Approach
1 2 3 4
Wen-Wen Liu,‡ a Ying Zhu,‡a Yi-Ming Feng,b Jin Fang,b and Qun Fang*a
5 6 7 8 9
a
Institute of Analytical Chemistry, Department of Chemistry and Innovation Center for Cell
Signaling Network, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310058, China b
Department of Cell Biology, China Medical University, Shenyang, 110001, China
10 11
Corresponding Author
12
*
E-mail:
[email protected]. Tel.: +86-571-88206771. Fax: +86-571-88273572.
13
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Here we developed the surface assisted multifactor fluid segmentation (SAMFS), an
3
automated, fast and flexible approach for generating two dimensional droplet array with
4
tunable droplet volumes, for multi-volume digital PCR. The SAMFS was developed based on
5
the combination of robotic liquid handling and surface assisted droplet generation techniques,
6
where a continuous aqueous stream flowed out from a capillary probe was segmented and
7
immobilized on hydrophilic micropillars of a microchip into massive oil-covered droplets with
8
the probe rapidly scanning over the microchip. We studied various factors affecting the droplet
9
generation process, including micropillar top area, distance between adjacent micropillars,
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aqueous stream flow rate and microchip moving speed, and demonstrated a high droplet
11
generation throughput up to 50 droplets/s and a largest droplet volume adjusting range from
12
0.25 nL to 350 nL. The SAMFS approach was adopted to form an oil-covered array of 994
13
droplets with four different volumes (1.2, 6, 30 and 150 nL droplets) required for multi-volume
14
digital PCR within 8 min. The droplet array system was applied in absolute quantification of
15
plasmid DNA under the multi-volume digital PCR mode with a dynamic range spanning four
16
orders of magnitude, as well as measurement of HER2 expression levels in different breast
17
cancer cell lines. The results are consistent to those obtained by quantitative real-time PCR
18
method, while the present one has higher precision.
19 20
As an emerging method for absolute gene quantification, digital PCR plays a more and more
21
important role in the field of molecular biology.1,2 In digital PCR, DNA template is randomly
22
partitioned into plenty of reactors followed by PCR reaction and then its concentration is absolutely
23
quantified by counting the number of positive reactors and calculating the results based on Poisson
24
distribution.3,4 Since the quantification is independent of amplification curve, digital PCR eliminates 2
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the uncertainties and inaccuracies from the variations in amplification efficiency, and thus it exhibits
2
higher sensitivity and accuracy compared with quantitative real-time PCR.5,6 Nowadays, digital PCR
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has been widely used in cancer research,7,8 prenatal diagnosis,9,10 pathogen detection11,12 and
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environmental studies.13,14
5
In recent years, microfluidic chips become the dominating platform for digital PCR, because
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the microfluidic technique provides attractive characteristics in performing massive isolated
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microreactions including high throughput and automated generation of massive microreactors, as
8
well as low sample/reagent consumption. Currently, various microfluidic techniques have been
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developed to implement digital PCR, and among them three strategies have been usually employed,
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including polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) chip-based microchambers, SlipChip, and droplet-based
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microfluidics using continuous flow isolation or surface-assisted method for droplet generation.
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With PDMS chips, integrated microvalves are commonly employed to realize microchamber
13
isolation for sample partitioning.13,15 Besides microvalve, immiscible oil, such as mineral oil or
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fluorinate oils, can also be used for compartmenting aqueous sample solution into
15
microchambers.16-18 The gas permeability of PDMS material facilitates sample self-introduction into
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the microchambers without external equipment.19 A SlipChip20,21 device usually consists of two
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assembled plates imprinted with wells and ducts. Sample solution is first introduced and filled the
18
connected ducts and wells, and then segmented by slipping one plate to separate wells from ducts.
19
Droplet-based microfluidics provides an economical way for high throughput microreactor isolation
20
and generation, and thus has received more and more attention in recent years, as reflected in two
21
commercial digital PCR instruments. Based on multiple-phase instability, a continuously-flowing
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sample stream is isolated by immiscible oil into droplets in a flow focusing or T junction
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microchannel other than chambers and wells.22,23 Commercial droplet-based digital PCR instruments, 3
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such as BioRad QX20024,25 and RainDance RainDropTM,26 can generate uniform droplets with high
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throughput of twenty thousand droplets and ca. a million droplets per sample, respectively, and both
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instruments are capable to perform assays for eight samples in parallel. In addition, droplet-based
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techniques using primer-functionalized beads27,28 or agarose droplets29 instead of primer solution
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have been developed for subsequent recovery of droplet contents. Massive droplets can also be
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generated using the surface-assisted technique30 instead of the continuous flow technique22,23. With
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such a technique, selectively patterned hydrophilic wells or through holes are adopted to trap and
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isolate the sample solution into a stationary, two dimensional (2D) droplet array. After droplet
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generation, fluorinated oil is usually employed to prevent droplet evaporation during PCR cycling.
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Wide dynamic range is one of the essential considerations for a digital PCR assay, especially
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for the applications dealing with samples with large concentration differences, such as viral load
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evaluation31 and gene expressions in different tissue samples32. Wide assay dynamic range would
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accelerate the measurement operation by avoiding sample serial dilution before PCR amplification,
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and also facilitate the quantification of real-world samples with unknown concentrations. To obtain
15
wide dynamic range, most of the microfluidic digital PCR systems employed the strategy of
16
increasing the number of compartmentalized microreactors, since the dynamic range enlarges with
17
the increase of reaction number.16,22 However, simply increasing reaction number will lead to
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significant challenge in the fabrication of high-density chambers and the detection of large numbers
19
of droplets. An alternative strategy is to use the multi-volume digital PCR method,33 where multiple
20
microreactors with different volumes are utilized. Compared with single volume digital PCR
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systems, the multi-volume strategy can significantly reduce the total reactor number, while
22
maintaining the same dynamic range.33 For example, by theoretical calculation, 1000
23
multiple-volume reactors with volumes spanning about two orders of magnitude are predicted to 4
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offer a dynamic range similar to that of 10000 single-volume reactors. Moreover, the dynamic range
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and resolution under the multi-volume digital PCR mode can be independently adjusted according to
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actual requirements. Multi-volume digital PCR was first reported for quantification of HIV and
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hepatitis C virus load with the SlipChip technique.21 A wide dynamic range for each virus load
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detection from 1.8×103 to 1.2 ×107 molecules/mL could be obtained by adopting multiple reaction
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chambers with well volumes from 0.2 nL to 625 nL. For fabrication of multiple chambers with large
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volume range on one glass chip, complex multi-step lithography and wet-etching procedures were
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employed to produce wells with different depths of 30 μm and 100 μm.21 Integrated pneumatic
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micropumps were also developed for generating droplets with multiple sizes from 73 to 265 m for
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multi-volume digital PCR.34 Droplet volume was adjusted by changing the actuation pressure and
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frequency of the micropump. Recently, Xu et. al.35 described a cross-interface emulsification
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technique, where droplets were generated by vibrating a capillary at the air-oil interface and the
13
droplet volume could be adjusted by changing sample flow rate and capillary vibrating frequency.
14
Here, we described surface assisted multifactor fluid segmentation (SAMFS), an automated and
15
rapid approach to generate 2D droplet array with multiple volumes on a microchip. The SAMFS
16
approach was developed by combining robotic liquid handling and surface assisted droplet
17
generation techniques, utilizing the advantages of the former in automated operation and accurate
18
fluid driving and control, as well as the latter’s ability in simple and reliable droplet segmentation
19
and immobilization with hydrophilic micropillar array. Massive oil-covered droplets could be
20
automatically formed with a high throughput up to 50 droplets/s and with a flexibly adjustable
21
droplet volume range up to ca. 1000 times. We applied the SAMFS approach to form droplet array
22
with four different droplet volumes from 1.2 nL to 150 nL for multi-volume digital PCR assay with a
23
dynamic range spanning four orders of magnitude. The present digital PCR system was further 5
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applied to quantify HER2 expression levels in different breast cancer cell lines to demonstrate its
2
feasibility in medical diagnosis and targeted therapy.
3 4
EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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Chip Fabrication. Glass chips with hydrophilic micropillar array were fabricated by using
6
photolithography and wet etching technology (see Figure 1b). Four types of micropillars with
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different sizes (180 m, 220 m, 300 m, and 480 m diameter) and numbers (260, 294, 264, 176)
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were designed in one microchip, to generate droplets with different volumes of 1.2 nL, 6 nL, 30 nL
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and 150 nL, and thus obtain a wide detection dynamic range. Glass plate coated with chromium and
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photoresist (Shaoguang, Changsha, China) was first aligned with a pre-designed photomask
11
(Kaisheng, Shanghai, China) with the micropillar array configuration and then exposed to UV light.
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Later the glass plate was immersed in a NaOH solution (0.125 M) for development and heated at
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110 °C for photoresist curing. Next, the exposed chromium area was removed using a chromium
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etchant solution (HClO4/(NH4)2Ce(NO3)6, 0.6/0.365 M) to further expose the underlying glass
15
surface. After rinsed with water, the glass plate was then incubated in a wet etching solution
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(HF/NH4F/HNO3, 1.0/0.5 /0.75 M) to etch the exposed glass area with an etching depth of 5 m. For
17
further surface modification, the patterned glass plate was first treated in 1 M NaOH solution for 20
18
min followed by drying. Then it was immersed in a n-octadecyltrichlorosilane solution (0.25 wt %,
19
Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in toluene for 30 min to perform silanization. As a result, the exposed glass
20
area became hydrophobic, while the top end area of each micropillar protected by the chromium
21
layer still maintained intrinsic hydrophilic property of glass. The residual chromium layer was then
22
totally removed using the previous chromium etchant solution. Finally, a hydrophilic micropillar
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array surrounded with hydrophobic coating was fabricated on the glass chip. For containing cover oil, 6
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a glass frame fabricated by drilling method was glued on the micropillar array chip using epoxy
2
adhesive.
3
Instruments. The movement of microchip and liquid handling operation performed in the
4
present work were achieved using our previously-developed droplet robot platform.36 It was mainly
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composed of a tapered capillary probe (Polytetrafluoroethylene, PTFE, 50 µm i.d., 370 µm o.d.; tip
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size, 50 µm i.d., 160 µm o.d.)(Cole-Parmer Vernon Hills, IL), a syringe pump (PHD 2000, Harvard
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Apparatus, Holliston, MA) with a 100 µL syringe (1710N, Hamilton, Reno, NV) and an automated
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x-y-z translation stage (PSA series, Zolix, Beijing, China). The PTFE capillary probe, instead of
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fused silica capillaries as in previous work37, was chosen to further eliminate sample adsorption on
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the probe surface. The tapered tip of the capillary probe was fabricated using pulling method with a
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hot air gun (852D, Chinafix Co., Shenzhen, China) at 270 °C.
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In order to achieve thermal cycling and wide-field fluorescence imaging, we set up a CCD
13
camera (DH-SV1411FM, Daheng Image, Beijing, China) coupled with a Nikon camera lens (AF
14
Micro 60 mm f/2.8D, Nikon, Japan) over a commercial thermal cycler with an in-situ heating plate
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(TC-EA/B-4IA, Bioer, Hangzhou, China). The fluorescence of the droplet array was excited at 470
16
nm by two LEDs (3W, Cree, Durham, NC) and filtered with a narrowband pass filter (535AF40,
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Omega, Brattleboro, VT). A customized program written by LabVIEW (Version 8.0, National
18
Instruments, Austin, TX) was used for controlling shutters of the excited light and CCD camera to
19
implement in situ real time fluorescence detection. Fluorescence images captured by the CCD
20
camera were processed with background subtraction and contrast enhancement by ImageJ (NIH, MD)
21
to quantify digital PCR results.
22
Procedure Droplet generation. A schematic diagram of the setup of the present droplet-based digital PCR
23
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system is shown in Figure 1a. The capillary probe was connected with the syringe for fluid transport,
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and the flow rate could be controlled precisely by the syringe pump. The movement of the microchip
3
mounted on the x-y-z translation stage was controlled using a program written by LabVIEW.
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At first, 3 µL of mineral oil (M5904, Sigma, St. Louis, MS) and 40 µL of sample solution were
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sequentially aspirated by the capillary probe into a PTFE storage tube (ca. 60 cm length, 300 µm i.d.,
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760 µm o.d., Cole-Parmer, Vernon Hills, IL) connected the probe and the syringe used for
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temporarily storing sample solution. Then, the position of the capillary probe was adjusted to a
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distance of ca. 0.1 mm between its tip end and the microchip surface. And the mineral oil was
9
covered on the chip for preventing droplets evaporation. For droplet generation, the syringe pump
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was set at a constant-flow-rate working mode, i.e. the aqueous sample solution continuously flowed
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out from the tip of the capillary probe. Meanwhile, the microchip was controlled by the program to
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move along a predetermined path, allowing the capillary probe sequentially sweep the tops of target
13
micropillars. During this process, the aqueous solution flowing out from the capillary tip was
14
adhered and restricted on the hydrophilic top area of the micropillar under the oil-layer, due to the
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selective hydrophilic/hydrophobic surface modification to the chip. With the continuously moving of
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the chip, the solution adhered on the micropillar top was separated from the capillary probe tip as
17
well as the solution stream flowing out from the capillary tip, forming a droplet on the micropillar
18
covered by oil. By regularly and continuously moving the chip to allow the capillary tip sweep along
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a series of micropillars, droplet array could be generated at a high speed.
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Digital PCR. Primers, SYBRGreen Select Master Mix (No. 4473903), Taqman Universal
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Master Mix (No. 4440042) and TaqMan® Gene Expression Assays (hs01001580-m1 and
22
hs02758991-g1) were all purchased from Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. (Waltham, MA). Diethyl
23
pyrocarbonate (DEPC)-treated water (TAKARA, Dalian, China) was used for sample preparation. 8
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Primer sequences for PIK3CA were as follows:
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5’-GGAGTATTTCATGAAACAAATGAATGATGCA-3’ (forward primer)
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5’-GAGCTTTCATTTTCTCAGTTATCTT-3’ (reverse primer).
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For PIK3CA gene amplification, 40 µL reaction solution consisted of 20 µL of 2× SYBRGreen
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Select Master Mix, 1.6 µL of forward primer (10 µM), 1.6 µL of reverse primer (10 µM), 0.5 µL of
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20 mg mL-1 BSA solution (TAKARA, Dalian, China), 14.3 µL of DEPC-treated water, and 2 µL of
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plasmid DNA (Sangon, Shanghai, China).
8
After droplet generation, the chip was degassed by vacuum and covered with a silanated
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hydrophobic glass slide to further prevent droplet evaporation. Then the chip was placed on the
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thermal cycler for amplification and on chip imaging. PCR thermal cycling was initiated with 4-min
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“UNG inactivation” at 50 °C and 5-min “hot start” at 95 °C. Next, 36 cycles were performed as
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follows: 42 s at 95 °C for denaturation, 45 s at 60 °C for primer annealing, 60 s at 72 °C for
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extension.
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In gene expression experiment, commercial TaqMan® Gene Expression Assays (HER2:
15
hs01001580-m1, GAPDH: hs02758991-g1) were used for target gene amplification. SKBR-3 cells
16
and MCF-7 cells (Type Culture Collection of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China) in
17
suspension were collected to extract total RNA and synthesize cDNA by Sangon. The reaction
18
solution (40 µL) consisted of 20 µL of 2×Taqman Universal Master mix, 2 µL of TaqMan® Gene
19
Expression Assay (20×), 16 µL of DEPC-treated water, and 2 µL of cDNA. A two-step thermal
20
cycling protocol (3 min at 50 °C; 10 min at 95 °C; 45 cycles of [35 s at 95 °C, 70 s at 60 °C]) was
21
carried out.
22
The glass chip could be reused for more than ten times without observable performance loss.
23
Before reuse, the glass chip was treated sequentially with DNA-ExitusPlusTM (AppliChem, 9
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Darmstadt, Germany) and RNase remover (TIANDZ, Beijing, China), rinsed with deionized water,
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and dried in a heat oven.
3 4
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
5
System design. In this work, we aimed to develop an automated and fast approach to generate
6
droplets with multiple volumes for multi-volume digital PCR with wide dynamic range. We
7
specially intended to use a robotic system coupled with the surface-assisted technique for achieving
8
droplet generation, because such a fully automated system would provide a possibility to embed the
9
digital PCR function in the automated liquid handling platforms currently used in many biological
10
laboratories. However, the state-of-art liquid handling robots, such as Mosquito (TTP Labtech, Co.)
11
and HoneyBee (DigiLab, Inc.), have limitation in forming nanoliter-scale droplets required for
12
digital PCR assay. We have developed a droplet robot for liquid handling based on sequential
13
operation droplet array (SODA),36 which can reliably generate and manipulate droplets in the
14
picoliter to nanolitor range. It has been applied in various fields requiring nanoliter liquid handling,
15
such as enzyme reaction,36 protein crystallization,38 real-time PCR, and single cell analysis.37
16
However, the droplet generation speeds of these systems are commonly in the range of 2-10 s per
17
droplet, which are too low to be used in digital PCR. The relatively low droplet generation speeds of
18
SODA systems can be ascribed to two main reasons. First, a typical droplet generation cycle
19
includes a series of steps including x-y-z translation stage moving, stage stopping, syringe pump
20
starting, pump stopping, and stage moving again, to deposit droplet onto the target microwell. Such
21
an operation mode is suitable to handle multiple different samples in massive screening, while is
22
time consuming and low operation efficiency for generating plenty of droplets from one sample as in
23
digital PCR assay. Furthermore, the delay time between each adjacent step, as well as the low flow 10
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rates of the syringe pump for guaranteeing droplet uniformity make the operation time much longer.
2
To overcome this difficulty, we developed a surface assisted multifactor fluid segmentation
3
(SAMFS) approach to achieve automated and fast droplet generation. Differing from the previous
4
SODA technique, the SAMFS approach maintains continuous sample flow and chip/stage moving
5
without periodic pauses during the droplet generation process, i.e. the capillary probe continuously
6
scans the micropillars on the chip. The role of segmenting the continuous flow into immobilized and
7
isolated droplets is accomplished by the hydrophilic patterned micropillars. The process was
8
recorded and studied with a high-speed camera (Figure 2a, 2b, and Movie S1 in Supporting
9
Information). Figure 2a and 2b show schematic drawings and extracted images of one droplet
10
generation cycle. Aqueous sample solution is delivered out from the capillary tip driven by the
11
syringe pump at a constant flow rate (Figure 2b1). As a result of the hydrophobic property of the
12
capillary tip, the aqueous solution forms a spherical-shaped droplet on the tip, and its size increases
13
gradually (Figure 2b2). Meanwhile, the chip is moving horizontally under the control of the
14
translation stage. When the chip moves to a position where the capillary tip is just above a
15
micropillar, the aqueous droplet hung at the capillary tip adheres to the hydrophilic surface of the
16
micropillar (Figure 2b3) and a liquid bridge is formed (Figure 2b4). With the continuously moving
17
of the chip, the liquid bridge is broken up, leaving an isolated droplet immobilized on the
18
hydrophilic top area of the micropillar (Figure 2b5).
19
With the SAMFS approach, the droplet generation speed could be significantly increased by at
20
least 100 times compared with the previous SODA systems, with a highest speed of 50 droplets/s
21
(See section “Generation of multiple-volume droplets with the SAMFS approach”). In addition to
22
fast droplet generation speed, more importantly, the SAMFS approach also exhibits high flexibility
23
and reliability in controlling and changing droplet volumes by adjusting pump flow rate, and stage 11
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moving speed. Detailed study of the relationship among these parameters can be found in the next
2
section.
3
We demonstrated it can flexibly and reliably generate droplets with volumes from 0.25 nL to
4
350 nL with the same experiment setup. Figure 2c and 2d shows fluorescent images of a droplet
5
array with single volume of 10 nL and a droplet array with multi-volumes of 1.2 nL, 6 nL, 30 nL,
6
and 150 nL, respectively, using 100 M sodium fluorescein solution as a model sample.
7
Generation of multiple-volume droplets with the SAMFS approach. Since the combination
8
of the surface-assisted technique and liquid handling robot technique has not been reported for
9
oil-covered droplet generation, we investigated various factors affecting the droplet generation
10
process in details, including micropillar top surface area, distance between adjacent micropillars,
11
pump flow rate, and chip/stage moving speed.
12
In a typical surface-assisted hydrophilic spot system for droplet generation, the spot area (i.e.
13
the micropillar top area in the present system) plays an important role in droplet immobilization,
14
while is not the dominant factor to determine droplet volume. In the present system, for forming
15
large-volume droplets, larger size of micropillars is preferential to provide sufficient area to
16
immobilize and load the droplets. For forming small-volume droplets, smaller size of micropillars in
17
favor of keeping the droplet in hemispherical shape and increase its optical path in absorbance or
18
fluorescence detection. Experiments have shown that droplets with volumes ranging from 0.5 nL to
19
75 nL could be generated on a micropillar array with a diameter of 300 µm for each micropillar and
20
0.6 mm distance between adjacent micropillars by using the SAMFS approach. Besides the
21
micropillar size, an appropriate micropillar interval distance is also required to be chosen to prevent
22
droplet coalescence and meanwhile to ensure a high-density droplet array. Both the two
23
above-mentioned parameters are determined in the chip design stage prior to chip fabrication and 12
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droplet generation.
2
In addition to micropillar size and interval distance, sample flow rate and chip/stage moving
3
speed are two dominant and adjustable parameters to determine droplet volume during the process of
4
droplet generation. One major feature of the SAMFS approach is that the flow rate of the sample
5
solution flowing out from the capillary tip and the sweeping speed of the tip over the micropillar
6
array could be quantitatively controlled by the syringe pump and the stage, respectively. More
7
importantly, the sample solution flowed out from the capillary tip are totally formed into droplets on
8
the micropillars. This is different from the previous surface-assisted hydrophilic spot technique39,40
9
where only a part of sample solution was used for droplet formation, and complicated measurement
10
and calibration steps are usually required to obtain accurate droplet volumes. With such a feature, the
11
volume of each droplet could be accurately calculated by the following equation, which is equals to
12
the volume of aqueous solution flowed out from the tip during the movement from one micropillar
13
to next micropillar.
V F T F
14
S
(1)
15
Where V is the droplet volume (nL), F is the flow rate of pump (nL/s), T is the time for droplet
16
generation (s), S is the distance between the adjacent micropillars (mm), and ν is the moving speed
17
of the robotic stage (mm/s). To validate the correctness of equation 1, we generated droplet arrays
18
using 50 µM sodium fluorescein solution as a model sample at different flow rate (2, 3, 4, 5, and 6
19
µL/min) and different moving speed (2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 mm/s), and measured the fluorescence
20
intensity of the droplets, respectively. Since the total fluorescence intensity of a droplet obtained
21
from its image using Image J was linearly correlated with the droplet volume in the same testing
22
range as in Figure 3 (See Figure S1), we studied the effects of sample flow rate and chip moving
23
speed on droplet generation by using the droplet fluorescence intensity as the testing parameter 13
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1
(Figure 3a and 3b). As shown in Figure 3a and 3b, the fluorescence intensity is proportional to the
2
flow rate (R2 = 0.993), and inverse proportional to the moving speed (R2 = 0.999) with good linear
3
relationship, verifying the accuracy of equation 1. The equation 1 is also supported by the fact that
4
the calculated droplet generation time is self-consistent with the actual average value obtained by
5
recording the overall generation time of 40 droplets (see Table S1).
6
On the basis of equation 1, generation of multi-volume droplets can be conveniently realized by
7
adjusting the sample flow rate or chip moving speed instead of changing micropillar size or interval
8
distance. To further clarify the relationship of the droplet volume, sample flow rate, and chip moving
9
speed, a simulated three-dimensional plot was made at a fixed distance between adjacent
10
micropillars, in which the droplet volume was calculated using equation 1 and the variable ranges of
11
the parameters were acquired from actual experiments (Figure 3c). Taking a micropillar array with
12
300 µm micropillar size and 0.6 mm interval distance as an example, 0.5-nL droplets can be
13
generated at a flow rate of 0.75 µL/min and a moving speed of 15 mm/s. By increasing the flow rate
14
to 6 µL/min meanwhile slowing the moving speed to 0.8 mm/s, 75 nL of droplets can be generated
15
in the same micropillar array, achieving 150-fold variation in droplet volume.
16
For the multi-volume droplet array shown in Figure 2d, two different flow rate (1.44 µL/min
17
and 9.00 µL/min) and four different moving speed (6.0, 1.6, 3.0, and 0.9 mm/s) were employed to
18
generate droplets with volumes of 1.2 nL, 6 nL, 30 nL and 150 nL, respectively, where the
19
coefficients of variation of droplet volumes are in the range of 3.9% to 7.8 %. Actually, by flexibly
20
adjusting the combination of the flow rate and moving speed, a larger droplet volume variation range
21
from 0.25 nL to 350 nL could be conveniently generated with the same micropillar array chip.
22
It should be noted that the SAMFS approach has intrinsic difference from the
23
previously-reported surface-assisted technique. In the well and through-hole based surface-assisted 14
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1
techniques, droplet volume is mostly decided by the well volumes.30,41 Adjusting reaction volumes
2
requires redesigning and fabrication of new microchips. With well-free surface-assisted
3
technique,39,40 droplets are formed on the surface of hydrophilic spots. The droplet volumes are
4
decided by multiple factors such as spot surface area, surface tension of aqueous sample solution,
5
and sliding speed during droplet generation process, which is required to be measured and calibrated
6
before the assay.
7
Performance of multi-volume digital PCR. For realizing multi-volume digital PCR with wide
8
dynamic range, we generated a droplet array consisted of four different volume droplets (260 1.2-nL,
9
294 6-nL, 264 30-nL, and 176 150-nL droplets) in 8 min. The volumes were increased by a
10
multiplication factor of five, for reaching a compromising balance between the quantification
11
resolution and dynamic range. With this multi-volume design, the system provides a dynamic range
12
from 83 to 3.7 × 106 copies/mL, spanning 4.6 orders of magnitude.
13
To test the performance of the multi-volume digital PCR system, we performed digital PCR
14
assay using a serial of dilutions of synthetic PIK3CA plasmid DNA with final concentrations ranging
15
from 1.1×102 copies/mL to 1.1×106 copies/mL. For each concentration, the experiment was tested 3
16
times. With the in-situ real time fluorescence detector, fluorescent images of multi-volume droplet
17
array at each cycle were automatically captured, which are help to distinguish the noise and
18
amplified signals.22 Figure 4a shows the end-point fluorescent images of negative control and
19
samples of plasmid DNA with five different concentrations spanning four-order of magnitudes. As
20
the DNA concentration increases, more positive droplets are observed. According to the principle of
21
multi-volume digital PCR,33 for the samples with DNA template concentrations below 104
22
copies/mL, large volume droplets (150 nL) contributes most to the final calculated results. With the
23
DNA template concentration increases, medium volume droplets (30 nL and 6 nL) make the major 15
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1
contribution in the result calculation. And small volume droplets (1.2 nL) acts an important role for
2
the calculation of concentration exceed 106 copies/mL.
3
By counting the number of positive droplets in each set of individual volumes, the DNA
4
template concentrations were calculated using a Matlab program33 based on Poisson distribution. As
5
shown in Figure 4b, the calculated concentration scales linearly with the expected concentration, and
6
the correlation coefficient between the two sets of values is 0.9997, which indicates the reliability of
7
the present multi-volume digital PCR system. We also plotted the ratio of calculated/expected
8
concentrations against the expected concentration (Figure 4c). In 15 experiments, 12 fell within the
9
95% confidence interval and all experiments fell within the 99% confidence interval. An analysis
10
between concentrations calculated by statistical analysis of all droplets with different volumes and
11
that calculated from each set of data of droplets with individual volumes, shows a self-consistent
12
result, further indicating the reliability of the present system for gene quantification (see Figure S2).
13
Measurement of HER2 gene expression. To demonstrate the potential of the present
14
multi-volume digital PCR system in medical diagnosis, we applied it to study HER2 gene expression
15
in different breast cancer cells. The HER2 gene expression level is closely related to patient
16
prognosis in breast cancer. High levels indicate high-risks of tumor invasion and metastasis, and
17
imply targeted therapy may be employed for patients. Two different types of breast cancer cells,
18
SKBR-3 and MCF-7 cells, were chosen as the model samples, for the reason that HER2 gene is
19
highly expressed in SKBR-3 cells while poorly expressed in MCF-7 cells. In order to demonstrate
20
the feasibility and performance of the present digital PCR assay method, the RNA extraction,
21
purification and reverse transcription for the samples were carried out using routine method15,19,32
22
instead of in-droplet method to reduce the uncertainty of experimental results. We prepared the
23
cDNA solution by reverse transcription from total RNA extracted from each culture cell line. Then 16
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Analytical Chemistry
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we employed the present system to absolutely quantify HER2 target gene and GAPDH reference
2
gene, respectively. The housekeeping GAPDH gene was used to normalize different input cDNA
3
amounts due to the variation of input cell numbers. Figure 5a illustrates the results of multi-volume
4
digital PCR in the quantification of HER2 (blue cycles) and GAPDH (blue squares) expression
5
levels in cDNA from SKBR-3 and MCF-7 cells, respectively. Significant different expressions of
6
HER2 gene in the two types of cells could be observed, which is in concordance with the previously
7
reported results 42. We next compared the result with that obtained using conventional quantitative
8
real-time PCR method. As shown in Figure 5b, the ratio of HER2 gene expression between SKBR-3
9
and MCF-7 cells was measured to be 5.15 ± 0.09 (n=3) by digital PCR, and 5.01 ± 0.77 (n=3) by
10
quantitative real-time PCR, indicating the better precision of the multi-volume digital PCR method
11
over the quantitative real-time PCR method.
12 13
CONCLUSIONS
14
In summary, we have developed an automated multi-volume digital PCR system with the
15
SAMFS approach, which realizes rapid generation of 2D droplet arrays with multiple volume
16
droplets directly under oil layer. This system was successfully applied in the absolute quantification
17
of nucleic acid and gene expression analysis of cDNA samples reverse-transcribed from different
18
breast cancer cells with good repeatability and wide dynamic range. The present work provides a
19
promising solution for coupling liquid handling robot technique with digital PCR assay. It also
20
provides an effective way for rapidly forming large scale of 2D droplet array covered by oil.
21
Differing from other microfluidic techniques with fixed volume of droplets or microchambers,
22
the volume of droplets formed by the SAMFS approach is mainly determined by the flow rate of
23
pump and moving speed of robotic stage, which can be easily and flexibly adjusted. In comparison 17
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1
with the SlipChip system using fixed-volume chambers to conveniently form droplets with different
2
sizes, the SAMFS approach is able to change droplet volume without the need of redesigning a new
3
chip. This offers convenience in adjusting the detection range of digital PCR assay according to the
4
actual requirements of different samples using the same chip. Since the present digital PCR assay
5
system was built on the basis of an automated robotic platform, it also has the potential in coupling
6
automated sample pretreatment with digital PCR assay. Meanwhile, due to the semi-open
7
characteristic of the present droplet array chip, it could be applied in subsequent gene analysis of
8
amplification products by employing the capillary to sample from target droplets through the cover
9
oil, like secondary PCR and gene sequencing. In addition, the SAMFS approach could also be
10
incorporated with a wide range of applications, including isothermal amplification, DNA library
11
preparation prior to sequencing, and single cell analysis, etc.
12
The SAMFS approach could be further developed in the future. To further improve the droplet
13
generation throughput, microchip with higher micropillar density or multiple capillary probes could
14
be used. The multiple capillary system coupled with multiple chips could also be used to implement
15
simultaneous multi-sample PCR assays. With smaller inner diameter of capillary or faster chip
16
moving speed, droplet volumes could be further decreased to picoliter scale. If some treatments,
17
such as primer bonding, protein bonding or chemical modification, are carried out to the micropillars
18
before droplet generation, sample pretreatment function may also be integrated with the system.
19 20 21
ACKNOWLEDGMENT ‡
Wen-Wen Liu and Ying Zhu contributed equally to this work.
22
Financial supports from Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants 21475117, 21435004, and
23
81327004), and Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province (Grant LY14B050001) are 18
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1
Analytical Chemistry
gratefully acknowledged.
2 3
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
4
This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
5
19
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FIGURE CAPTIONS
3
Figure 1. (a) Schematic diagram of the micropillar array chip. The insets show an enlarge image of
4
the droplet during the generation process and a photograph of a micropillar array chip with different
5
micropillar sizes. (b) Schematic diagram of fabrication process of a chip with hydrophilic
6
micropillar array.
7
Figure 2. Schematic drawings (a1-a5) and images (b1-b5) of a droplet generation cycle. Scale bar,
8
200 μm. Fluorescent images of a 38 × 38 droplet array with uniform droplet volume of 10 nL (c) and
9
a multi-volume droplet array with 1.2 nL, 6 nL, 30 nL, and 150 nLdroplet volumes (d).
10
Figure 3. (a) Linear correlation between droplet fluorescence intensity and sample flow rate at a
11
fixed chip moving speed of 5 mm/s. (b) Inversely proportional relationship between droplet
12
fluorescence intensity and reciprocal of chip moving speed at a fixed sample flow rate of 3 μL/min.
13
(c) Simulated three-dimensional plot showing the relationship of droplet volume, sample flow rate,
14
and chip moving speed at a fixed distance between adjacent micropillars.
15
Figure 4. Performance of the present multi-volume digital PCR. (a) End-point fluorescent images of
16
multi-volume droplet arrays in digital PCR assays with a serial dilution of plasmid DNA and
17
negative control. (b) Comparison of the expected concentrations of plasmid DNA to the calculated
18
concentrations. (c) Comparison of the expected concentrations of plasmid DNA to the ratios of
19
calculated/expected concentration.
20
Figure 5. (a) HER2 gene expression levels in MCF-7 and SKBR-3 cells by multi-volume digital
21
PCR. The normalized ratio of HER2 to GAPDH in gene expression is represented by the red
22
diamonds. (b) Ratios of HER2 gene expression between SKBR-3 and MCF-7 cells measured by the
23
present multi-volume digital PCR and conventional quantitative real-time PCR, respectively.
24 25
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(a)
Capillary
Micropillar Oil
Droplet
Micropillar
Frame Micropillar array chip
(b) Mask Cr Glass Photoresist
UV light
Exposure
Cr Removal
Wet Etching Hydrophilic surface Hydrophobic surface
AZ Removal
Silanization
3 4
Figure 1
5 6 7
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(a1)
Capillary
Micropillar
(b1) Micropillar
Capillary
Droplet
Oil 4
3
Chip
2
1
0.00 s
(a2)
Droplet
(b2)
4
3
2
1
0.03 s
(a3)
(b3)
4
3
2
0.07 s
(a4)
(b4)
Liquid bridge 4
3
2
0.11 s
(a5)
(b5)
4
3
2
0.13 s
(d)
(c)
1 mm
2 mm
3 4 5
Figure 2
6
2 mm
7 27
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(a)
R2 = 0.993
(b) R2 = 0.999
(c)
3 4 5
Figure 3
6 7 8 9
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1 2 3
(a)
Negative control
1.1×102 copies/mL
1.1×103 copies/mL
1.1×104 copies/mL
1.1×105 copies/mL
1.1×106 copies/mL
(b)
(c)
R2=0.9997
4 5 6
Figure 4
7 8
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Concentration (copies/μL)
(a)
MCF-7 cells
SKBR-3 cells
(b)
dPCR
qPCR
4 5 6
Figure 5
7 8
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Normalized HER2 : GAPDH ratio
3
Ratio (SKBR-3 : MCF-7)
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Analytical Chemistry
1 2 Droplet array
Capillary
Micropillar Droplet
Oil
2 mm
Micropillar
Frame Micropillar array chip
3 4
For TOC only
5 6 7 8
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1 mm
Analytical Chemistry
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Graphic for manuscript 1102x426mm (144 x 144 DPI)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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