A Disposable Laser Print-cut-laminate Polyester Microchip for Multiplexed PCR Via Infra-red-mediated Thermal Control
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Infrared (IR)-mediated thermal cycling system, a method proven to be a effective for sub-μL scale polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on microchips, has been integrated with DNA extraction and separation on a glass microchip in a fully integrated micro Total Analysis System by Easley et al., in 2006. IR-PCR has been demonstrated on both glass and PMMA microdevices where the fabrication (bonding) is not trivial. Polyester-toner (PeT) microfluidic devices have significant potential as cost-effective, disposable microdevices as a result of the ease of fabrication (∼$0.25 USD and <10 min per device) and availability of commercial substrates. For the first time, we demonstrate here the thermal cycling in PeT microchips on the IR-PCR system. Undesirable IR absorption by the black-toner bonding layer was eliminated with a spatial filter in the form of an aluminum foil mask. The solution heating rate for a black PeT microchip using a tungsten lamp was 10.1 ± 0.7 °C s(-1) with a cooling rate of roughly -12 ± 0.9 °C s(-1) assisted by forced air cooling. Dynamic surface passivation strategies allowed the successful amplification of a 520 bp fragment of the λ-phage genome (in 11 min) and a 1500 bp region of Azospirillum brasilense. Using a centrosymmetric chamber configuration in a multichamber PeT microchip, homogenous temperature distribution over all chambers was achieved with inter-chamber temperature differences at annealing, extension and denaturing steps of less than ±2 °C. The effectiveness of the multichamber system was demonstrated with the simultaneous amplification of a 390 bp amplicon of human β-globin gene in five PeT PCR microchambers. The relative PCR amplification efficiency with a human β-globin DNA fragment ranged from 70% to 90%, in comparison to conventional thermal cyclers, with an inter-chamber standard deviation of ∼10%. Development of PeT microchips for IR-PCR has the potential to provide rapid, low-volume amplification while also integrating PCR with extraction upstream and separation/detection downstream.
Concave Version Printing of High-Performance Polymer THz Filters.
Wei J, Miao Y, Zhang W, Chen Y, Sun G, Wu K ACS Omega. 2024; 9(13):15421-15427.
PMID: 38585109 PMC: 10993357. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.3c10479.
Wang Y, Wang C, Zhou Z, Si J, Li S, Zeng Y Biosensors (Basel). 2023; 13(7).
PMID: 37504131 PMC: 10377012. DOI: 10.3390/bios13070732.
Rapid, inexpensive fabrication of electrophoretic microdevices for fluorescence detection.
Nelson D, Thompson B, Scott A, Nouwairi R, Birch C, DuVall J Electrophoresis. 2022; 43(16-17):1746-1754.
PMID: 35656648 PMC: 9544361. DOI: 10.1002/elps.202200090.
Ultrafast DNA Amplification Using Microchannel Flow-Through PCR Device.
Lin Y, Liao X, Chang W, Chiou C Biosensors (Basel). 2022; 12(5).
PMID: 35624604 PMC: 9138433. DOI: 10.3390/bios12050303.
Rapid PCR powered by microfluidics: A quick review under the background of COVID-19 pandemic.
Dong X, Liu L, Tu Y, Zhang J, Miao G, Zhang L Trends Analyt Chem. 2021; 143:116377.
PMID: 34188341 PMC: 8223007. DOI: 10.1016/j.trac.2021.116377.