Lab on a Chip, volume 15, issue 14, pages 3013-3020
Development of a platform for single cell genomics using convex lens-induced confinement
Sahar S. Mahshid
1, 2
,
Mohammed Jalal Ahamed
1
,
Daniel Berard
1
,
Susan Amin
1
,
Robert Sladek
2
,
Sabrina R. Leslie
1
,
Walter Reisner
1
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2015-06-02
Journal:
Lab on a Chip
scimago Q1
SJR: 1.246
CiteScore: 11.1
Impact factor: 6.1
ISSN: 14730197, 14730189
PubMed ID:
26062011
General Chemistry
Biochemistry
Bioengineering
Biomedical Engineering
Abstract
We demonstrate a lab-on-a-chip that combines micro/nano-fabricated features with a Convex Lens-Induced Confinement (CLIC) device for the in situ analysis of single cells. A complete cycle of single cell analysis was achieved that includes: cell trapping, cell isolation, lysis, protein digestion, genomic DNA extraction and on-chip genomic DNA linearization. The ability to dynamically alter the flow-cell dimensions using the CLIC method was coupled with a flow-control mechanism for achieving efficient cell trapping, buffer exchange, and loading of long DNA molecules into nanofluidic arrays. Finite element simulation of fluid flow gives rise to optimized design parameters for overcoming the high hydraulic resistance present in the micro/nano-confinement region. By tuning design parameters such as the pressure gradient and CLIC confinement, an efficient on-chip single cell analysis protocol can be obtained. We demonstrate that we can extract Mbp long genomic DNA molecules from a single human lybphoblastoid cell and stretch these molecules in the nanochannels for optical interrogation.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.