4.8 Article

UV-Vis Spectra-Activated Droplet Sorting for Label-Free Chemical Identification and Collection of Droplets

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 93, Issue 38, Pages 13008-13013

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.1c02822

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Funding

  1. NCCR Molecular Systems Engineering [51NF40-182895]

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The UV-vis spectra-activated droplet sorter (UVADS) is a new tool for high-throughput label-free chemical identification and enzyme screening. It collects full UV-vis spectra, processes data quickly, and sorts droplets for analysis. This technology can distinguish different chemicals and measure enzyme activity.
We introduce the UV-vis spectra-activated droplet sorter (UVADS) for high-throughput label-free chemical identification and enzyme screening. In contrast to previous absorbancebased droplet sorters that relied on single-wavelength absorbance in the visible range, our platform collects full UV-vis spectra from 200 to 1050 nm at up to 2100 spectra per second. Our custombuilt open-source software application, SpectraSorter, enables real-time data processing, analysis, visualization, and selection of droplets for sorting with any set of UV-vis spectral features. An optimized UV-vis detection region extended the absorbance path length for droplets and allowed for the direct protein quantification down to 10 mu M of bovine serum albumin at 280 nm. UV-vis spectral data can distinguish a variety of different chemicals or spurious events (such as air bubbles) that are inaccessible at a single wavelength. The platform is used to measure ergothionase enzyme activity from monoclonal microcolonies isolated in droplets. In a label-free manner, we directly measure the ergothioneine substrate to thiourocanic acid product conversion while tracking the microcolony formation. UVADS represents an important new tool for high-throughput label-free in-droplet chemical analysis.

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