» Articles » PMID: 25263064

Optimization of a Microfluidic Electrophoretic Immunoassay Using a Peltier Cooler

Overview
Journal J Chromatogr A
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2014 Sep 30
PMID 25263064
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Successful analysis of electrophoretic affinity assays depends strongly on the preservation of the affinity complex during separations. Elevated separation temperatures due to Joule heating promotes complex dissociation leading to a reduction in sensitivity. Affinity assays performed in glass microfluidic devices may be especially prone to this problem due to poor heat dissipation due to the low thermal conductivity of glass and the large amount of bulk material surrounding separation channels. To address this limitation, a method to cool a glass microfluidic chip for performing an affinity assay for insulin was achieved by a Peltier cooler localized over the separation channel. The Peltier cooler allowed for rapid stabilization of temperatures, with 21°C the lowest temperature that was possible to use without producing detrimental thermal gradients throughout the device. The introduction of cooling improved the preservation of the affinity complex, with even passive cooling of the separation channel improving the amount of complex observed by 2-fold. Additionally, the capability to thermostabilize the separation channel allowed for utilization of higher separation voltages than what was possible without temperature control. Kinetic CE analysis was utilized as a diagnostic of the affinity assay and indicated that optimal conditions were at the highest separation voltage, 6 kV, and the lowest separation temperature, 21°C, leading to 3.4% dissociation of the complex peak during the separation. These optimum conditions were used to generate a calibration curve and produced 1 nM limits of detection, representing a 10-fold improvement over non-thermostated conditions. This methodology of cooling glass microfluidic devices for performing robust and high sensitivity affinity assays on microfluidic systems should be amenable in a number of applications.

Citing Articles

Recent advances and challenges in temperature monitoring and control in microfluidic devices.

Dos-Reis-Delgado A, Carmona-Dominguez A, Sosa-Avalos G, Jimenez-Saaib I, Villegas-Cantu K, Gallo-Villanueva R Electrophoresis. 2022; 44(1-2):268-297.

PMID: 36205631 PMC: 10092670. DOI: 10.1002/elps.202200162.


Microfluidic and mathematical modeling of aquatic microbial communities.

Liu F, Giometto A, Wu M Anal Bioanal Chem. 2020; 413(9):2331-2344.

PMID: 33244684 PMC: 7990691. DOI: 10.1007/s00216-020-03085-7.


A microfluidic platform integrating pressure-driven and electroosmotic-driven flow with inline filters for affinity separations.

Leng W, Evans K, Roper M Anal Methods. 2020; 11(45):5768-5775.

PMID: 31983930 PMC: 6980329. DOI: 10.1039/C9AY01758E.


Automated microfluidic droplet sampling with integrated, mix-and-read immunoassays to resolve endocrine tissue secretion dynamics.

Li X, Hu J, Easley C Lab Chip. 2018; 18(19):2926-2935.

PMID: 30112543 PMC: 6234046. DOI: 10.1039/c8lc00616d.


Online fluorescence anisotropy immunoassay for monitoring insulin secretion from islets of Langerhans.

Schrell A, Mukhitov N, Yi L, Adablah J, Menezes J, Roper M Anal Methods. 2017; 9(1):38-45.

PMID: 28458724 PMC: 5407318. DOI: 10.1039/C6AY02899C.


References
1.
Shimura K, Karger B . Affinity probe capillary electrophoresis: analysis of recombinant human growth hormone with a fluorescent labeled antibody fragment. Anal Chem. 1994; 66(1):9-15. DOI: 10.1021/ac00073a004. View

2.
Jacobson S, Ermakov S, Ramsey J . Minimizing the number of voltage sources and fluid reservoirs for electrokinetic valving in microfluidic devices. Anal Chem. 2011; 71(15):3273-6. DOI: 10.1021/ac990059s. View

3.
Buchanan D, Jameson E, Perlette J, Malik A, Kennedy R . Effect of buffer, electric field, and separation time on detection of aptamer-ligand complexes for affinity probe capillary electrophoresis. Electrophoresis. 2003; 24(9):1375-82. DOI: 10.1002/elps.200390176. View

4.
Guillo C, Truong T, Roper M . Simultaneous capillary electrophoresis competitive immunoassay for insulin, glucagon, and islet amyloid polypeptide secretion from mouse islets of Langerhans. J Chromatogr A. 2011; 1218(26):4059-64. PMC: 3109176. DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2011.05.006. View

5.
Ross D, Locascio L . Microfluidic temperature gradient focusing. Anal Chem. 2002; 74(11):2556-64. DOI: 10.1021/ac025528w. View