4.7 Article

A microfluidic chip capable of generating and trapping emulsion droplets for digital loop-mediated isothermal amplification analysis

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 296-303

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7lc01004d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Taiwan's Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST 105-2119-M-007-009, MOST 105-2221-E-007-007]
  2. Towards a World-Class University Project [104N2751E1]

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Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a nucleic acid amplification technique that rapidly amplifies specific DNA molecules at high yield. In this study, a microfluidic droplet array chip was designed to execute the digital LAMP process. The novel device was capable of 1) creating emulsion droplets, 2) sorting them into a 30 x 8 droplet array, and 3) executing LAMP across the 240 trapped and separated droplets (with a volume of 0.22 nL) after only 40 min of reaction at 56 degrees C. Nucleic acids were accurately quantified across a dynamic range of 50 to 2.5 x 10(3) DNA copies per mu L, and the limit of detection was a single DNA molecule. This is the first time that an arrayed emulsion droplet microfluidic device has been used for digital LAMP analysis. When compared to microwell digital nucleic acid amplification assays, this droplet array-based digital LAMP assay eliminates the constraint on the size of the digitized target, which was determined by the dimension of the microwells for its counterparts. Moreover, the capacity for hydrodynamic droplet trapping allows the chip to operate in a one-droplet-to-one-trap manner. This microfluidic chip may therefore become a promising device for digital LAMP-based diagnostics in the near future.

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