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Download fileInterfacing Microwells with Nanoliter Compartments: A Sampler Generating High-Resolution Concentration Gradients for Quantitative Biochemical Analyses in Droplets
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posted on 2015-01-06, 00:00 authored by Fabrice Gielen, Tomas Buryska, Liisa Van Vliet, Maren Butz, Jiri Damborsky, Zbynek Prokop, Florian HollfelderAnalysis
of concentration dependencies is key to the quantitative
understanding of biological and chemical systems. In experimental
tests involving concentration gradients such as inhibitor library
screening, the number of data points and the ratio between the stock
volume and the volume required in each test determine the quality
and efficiency of the information gained. Titerplate assays are currently
the most widely used format, even though they require microlitre volumes.
Compartmentalization of reactions in pico- to nanoliter water-in-oil
droplets in microfluidic devices provides a solution for massive volume
reduction. This work addresses the challenge of producing microfluidic-based
concentration gradients in a way that every droplet represents one
unique reagent combination. We present a simple microcapillary technique
able to generate such series of monodisperse water-in-oil droplets
(with a frequency of up to 10 Hz) from a sample presented in an open
well (e.g., a titerplate). Time-dependent variation of the well content
results in microdroplets that represent time capsules of the composition
of the source well. By preserving the spatial encoding of the droplets
in tubing, each reactor is assigned an accurate concentration value.
We used this approach to record kinetic time courses of the haloalkane
dehalogenase DbjA and analyzed 150 combinations of enzyme/substrate/inhibitor
in less than 5 min, resulting in conclusive Michaelis–Menten
and inhibition curves. Avoiding chips and merely requiring two pumps,
a magnetic plate with a stirrer, tubing, and a pipet tip, this easy-to-use
device rivals the output of much more expensive liquid handling systems
using a fraction (∼100-fold less) of the reagents consumed
in microwell format.
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inhibition curvesstock volumemicrolitre volumesdevice rivalstime capsules5 mintime coursesreagent combinationvolume reductioncontent resultsconcentration dependenciesmicrocapillary techniqueTiterplate assayschemical systemsconcentration gradientspipet tip10 Hzdropletsmicrowell formatinhibitor library screeningwork addressesdata pointshandling systemshaloalkane dehalogenase DbjAQuantitative Biochemical AnalysesInterfacing Microwells150 combinationsmicrofluidic devicesNanoliter Compartmentstubingconcentration value