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High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System

In this paper, we present a two-phase microfluidic system capable of incubating and quantifying microbead-based agglutination assays. The microfluidic system is based on a simple fabrication solution, which requires only laboratory tubing filled with carrier oil, driven by negative pressure using a...

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Autores principales: Castro, David, Conchouso, David, Kodzius, Rimantas, Arevalo, Arpys, Foulds, Ian G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6027479/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29867050
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes9060281
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author Castro, David
Conchouso, David
Kodzius, Rimantas
Arevalo, Arpys
Foulds, Ian G.
author_facet Castro, David
Conchouso, David
Kodzius, Rimantas
Arevalo, Arpys
Foulds, Ian G.
author_sort Castro, David
collection PubMed
description In this paper, we present a two-phase microfluidic system capable of incubating and quantifying microbead-based agglutination assays. The microfluidic system is based on a simple fabrication solution, which requires only laboratory tubing filled with carrier oil, driven by negative pressure using a syringe pump. We provide a user-friendly interface, in which a pipette is used to insert single droplets of a 1.25-µL volume into a system that is continuously running and therefore works entirely on demand without the need for stopping, resetting or washing the system. These assays are incubated by highly efficient passive mixing with a sample-to-answer time of 2.5 min, a 5–10-fold improvement over traditional agglutination assays. We study system parameters such as channel length, incubation time and flow speed to select optimal assay conditions, using the streptavidin-biotin interaction as a model analyte quantified using optical image processing. We then investigate the effect of changing the concentration of both analyte and microbead concentrations, with a minimum detection limit of 100 ng/mL. The system can be both low- and high-throughput, depending on the rate at which assays are inserted. In our experiments, we were able to easily produce throughputs of 360 assays per hour by simple manual pipetting, which could be increased even further by automation and parallelization. Agglutination assays are a versatile tool, capable of detecting an ever-growing catalog of infectious diseases, proteins and metabolites. A system such as this one is a step towards being able to produce high-throughput microfluidic diagnostic solutions with widespread adoption. The development of analytical techniques in the microfluidic format, such as the one presented in this work, is an important step in being able to continuously monitor the performance and microfluidic outputs of organ-on-chip devices.
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spelling pubmed-60274792018-07-13 High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System Castro, David Conchouso, David Kodzius, Rimantas Arevalo, Arpys Foulds, Ian G. Genes (Basel) Article In this paper, we present a two-phase microfluidic system capable of incubating and quantifying microbead-based agglutination assays. The microfluidic system is based on a simple fabrication solution, which requires only laboratory tubing filled with carrier oil, driven by negative pressure using a syringe pump. We provide a user-friendly interface, in which a pipette is used to insert single droplets of a 1.25-µL volume into a system that is continuously running and therefore works entirely on demand without the need for stopping, resetting or washing the system. These assays are incubated by highly efficient passive mixing with a sample-to-answer time of 2.5 min, a 5–10-fold improvement over traditional agglutination assays. We study system parameters such as channel length, incubation time and flow speed to select optimal assay conditions, using the streptavidin-biotin interaction as a model analyte quantified using optical image processing. We then investigate the effect of changing the concentration of both analyte and microbead concentrations, with a minimum detection limit of 100 ng/mL. The system can be both low- and high-throughput, depending on the rate at which assays are inserted. In our experiments, we were able to easily produce throughputs of 360 assays per hour by simple manual pipetting, which could be increased even further by automation and parallelization. Agglutination assays are a versatile tool, capable of detecting an ever-growing catalog of infectious diseases, proteins and metabolites. A system such as this one is a step towards being able to produce high-throughput microfluidic diagnostic solutions with widespread adoption. The development of analytical techniques in the microfluidic format, such as the one presented in this work, is an important step in being able to continuously monitor the performance and microfluidic outputs of organ-on-chip devices. MDPI 2018-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6027479/ /pubmed/29867050 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes9060281 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Castro, David
Conchouso, David
Kodzius, Rimantas
Arevalo, Arpys
Foulds, Ian G.
High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System
title High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System
title_full High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System
title_fullStr High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System
title_full_unstemmed High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System
title_short High-Throughput Incubation and Quantification of Agglutination Assays in a Microfluidic System
title_sort high-throughput incubation and quantification of agglutination assays in a microfluidic system
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6027479/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29867050
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes9060281
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