Building a biochemistry lab on a chip

2/21/2013 Rick Kubetz, Engineering at Illinois

Miniaturized laboratory-on-chip systems promise rapid, sensitive, and multiplexed detection of biological samples for medical diagnostics, drug discovery, and high-throughput screening.

Written by Rick Kubetz, Engineering at Illinois

Miniaturized laboratory-on-chip systems promise rapid, sensitive, and multiplexed detection of biological samples for medical diagnostics, drug discovery, and high-throughput screening. Using micro-fabrication techniques and incorporating a unique design of transistor-based heating, researchers at the University of Illinois are further advancing the use of silicon transistor and electronics into chemistry and biology for point-of-care diagnostics.
 
Lab-on-a-chip technologies are attractive as they require fewer reagents, have lower detection limits, allow for parallel analyses, and can have a smaller footprint.
 
“Integration of various laboratory functions onto microchips has been intensely studied for many years,” explained ECE and Bioengineering Professor Rashid Bashir, an Abel Bliss Professor at Illinois. “Further advances of these technologies require the ability to integrate additional elements, such as the miniaturized heating element, and the ability to integrate heating elements in a massively parallel format compatible with silicon technology.

 

Cross-section of device with a droplet. The left side shows an unheated droplet with the DNA FRET construct in the double-stranded form. The right side shows a heated droplet where the FRET construct has denatured, resulting in an increase in fluorescence.
Cross-section of device with a droplet. The left side shows an unheated droplet with the DNA FRET construct in the double-stranded form. The right side shows a heated droplet where the FRET construct has denatured, resulting in an increase in fluorescence.

“In this work, we demonstrated that we can heat nanoliter volume droplets, individually and in an array, using VLSI silicon based devices, up to temperatures that make it interesting to do various biochemical reactions within these droplets.”
 
“Our method positions droplets on an array of individual silicon microwave heaters on chip to precisely control the temperature of droplets-in-air, allowing us to perform biochemical reactions, including DNA melting and detection of single base mismatches,” said Eric Salm, a graduate student in Bioengineering and first author of the paper, “Ultralocalized thermal reactions in subnanoliter droplets-in-air,” published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS) on February 12.
 
According to Salm, approaches to perform localized heating of these individual subnanoliter droplets can allow for new applications that require parallel, time-, and space multiplex reactions on a single integrated circuit. Within miniaturized laboratory-on-chips, static and dynamic droplets of fluids in different immiscible media have been used as individual vessels to perform biochemical reactions and confine the products.
 
“This technology makes it possible to do cell lysing and nucleic acid amplification reactions within these individual droplets – the droplets are the reaction vessels or cuvettes that can be individually heated,” Salm added.
 
“We also demonstrate that ssDNA probe molecules can be placed on heaters in solution, dried, and then rehydrated by ssDNA target molecules in droplets for hybridization and detection,” said Bashir, who is director of the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory at Illinois. “This platform enables many applications in droplets including hybridization of low copy number DNA molecules, lysing of single cells, interrogation of ligand–receptor interactions, and rapid temperature cycling for amplification of DNA molecules.

 

(A) Top-down view of an array of 100pL droplets placed over heating elements. (B) A side-view schematic of a droplet placed on a heating element. The droplet contains duplexed DNA, modified with a pair of FRET fluorophores, that exhibits low fluorescence in the double-stranded state. When heated using and applied AC voltage between the source-drain and the back-gate, the DNA denatures, resulting in an observed increase in fluorescence.
(A) Top-down view of an array of 100pL droplets placed over heating elements. (B) A side-view schematic of a droplet placed on a heating element. The droplet contains duplexed DNA, modified with a pair of FRET fluorophores, that exhibits low fluorescence in the double-stranded state. When heated using and applied AC voltage between the source-drain and the back-gate, the DNA denatures, resulting in an observed increase in fluorescence.

“Notably,” Bashir added, “our miniaturized heater could also function as dual heater/sensor elements, as these silicon-on-insulator nanowire or nanoribbon structures have been used to detect DNA, proteins, pH, and pyrophosphates.
 
By using microfabrication techniques and incorporating the unique design of transistor-based heating with individual reaction volumes, ‘laboratory-on-a-chip’ technologies can be scaled down to ‘laboratory-on-a-transistor’ technologies as sensor/heater hybrids that could be used for point-of-care diagnostics.”
 
In addition to Salm and Bashir, co-authors of the study include Carlos Duarte Guevara, Piyush Dak, Brian Ross Dorvel, and Bobby Reddy, Jr. at the University of Illinois; and Muhammad Ashraf Alam of the Birck Nanotechnology Center and the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Purdue University.
 


Share this story

This story was published February 21, 2013.