Controlling Dispersion during Single-Cell Polyacrylamide-Gel
Electrophoresis in Open Microfluidic Devices
Posted on 2018-10-22 - 00:00
New tools for measuring
protein expression in individual cells
complement single-cell genomics and transcriptomics. To characterize
a population of individual mammalian cells, hundreds to thousands
of microwells are arrayed on a polyacrylamide-gel-coated glass microscope
slide. In this “open” fluidic device format, we explore
the feasibility of mitigating diffusional losses during lysis and
polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis (PAGE) through spatial control
of the pore-size of the gel layer. To reduce in-plane diffusion-driven
dilution of each single-cell lysate during in-microwell chemical lysis,
we photopattern and characterize microwells with small-pore-size sidewalls
ringing the microwell except at the injection region. To reduce out-of-plane-diffusion-driven-dilution-caused
signal loss during both lysis and single-cell PAGE, we scrutinize
a selectively permeable agarose lid layer. To reduce injection dispersion,
we photopattern and study a stacking-gel feature at the head of each
<1 mm separation axis. Lastly, we explore a semienclosed device
design that reduces the cross-sectional area of the chip, thus reducing
Joule-heating-induced dispersion during single-cell PAGE. As a result,
we observed a 3-fold increase in separation resolution during a 30
s separation and a >2-fold enhancement of the signal-to-noise ratio.
We present well-integrated strategies for enhancing overall single-cell-PAGE
performance.
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Pan, Qiong; Yamauchi, Kevin A.; Herr, Amy E. (2018). Controlling Dispersion during Single-Cell Polyacrylamide-Gel
Electrophoresis in Open Microfluidic Devices. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.8b03233