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Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification

Digital Light Processing (DLP) stereolithography (SLA) as a high-resolution 3D printing process offers a low-cost alternative for prototyping of microfluidic geometries, compared to traditional clean-room and workshop-based methods. Here, we investigate DLP-SLA printing performance for the productio...

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Autores principales: Tzivelekis, Charalampos, Sgardelis, Pavlos, Waldron, Kevin, Whalley, Richard, Huo, Dehong, Dalgarno, Kenny
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7592796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33112867
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240237
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author Tzivelekis, Charalampos
Sgardelis, Pavlos
Waldron, Kevin
Whalley, Richard
Huo, Dehong
Dalgarno, Kenny
author_facet Tzivelekis, Charalampos
Sgardelis, Pavlos
Waldron, Kevin
Whalley, Richard
Huo, Dehong
Dalgarno, Kenny
author_sort Tzivelekis, Charalampos
collection PubMed
description Digital Light Processing (DLP) stereolithography (SLA) as a high-resolution 3D printing process offers a low-cost alternative for prototyping of microfluidic geometries, compared to traditional clean-room and workshop-based methods. Here, we investigate DLP-SLA printing performance for the production of micro-chamber chip geometries suitable for Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), a key process in molecular diagnostics to amplify nucleic acid sequences. A DLP-SLA fabrication protocol for printed micro-chamber devices with monolithic micro-channels is developed and evaluated. Printed devices were post-processed with ultraviolet (UV) light and solvent baths to reduce PCR inhibiting residuals and further treated with silane coupling agents to passivate the surface, thereby limiting biomolecular adsorption occurences during the reaction. The printed devices were evaluated on a purpose-built infrared (IR) mediated PCR thermocycler. Amplification of 75 base pair long target sequences from genomic DNA templates on fluorosilane and glass modified chips produced amplicons consistent with the control reactions, unlike the non-silanized chips that produced faint or no amplicon. The results indicated good functionality of the IR thermocycler and good PCR compatibility of the printed and silanized SLA polymer. Based on the proposed methods, various microfluidic designs and ideas can be validated in-house at negligible costs without the requirement of tool manufacturing and workshop or clean-room access. Additionally, the versatile chemistry of 3D printing resins enables customised surface properties adding significant value to the printed prototypes. Considering the low setup and unit cost, design flexibility and flexible resin chemistries, DLP-SLA is anticipated to play a key role in future prototyping of microfluidics, particularly in the fields of research biology and molecular diagnostics. From a system point-of-view, the proposed method of thermocycling shows promise for portability and modular integration of funcitonalitites for diagnostic or research applications that utilize nucleic acid amplification technology.
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spelling pubmed-75927962020-11-02 Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification Tzivelekis, Charalampos Sgardelis, Pavlos Waldron, Kevin Whalley, Richard Huo, Dehong Dalgarno, Kenny PLoS One Research Article Digital Light Processing (DLP) stereolithography (SLA) as a high-resolution 3D printing process offers a low-cost alternative for prototyping of microfluidic geometries, compared to traditional clean-room and workshop-based methods. Here, we investigate DLP-SLA printing performance for the production of micro-chamber chip geometries suitable for Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), a key process in molecular diagnostics to amplify nucleic acid sequences. A DLP-SLA fabrication protocol for printed micro-chamber devices with monolithic micro-channels is developed and evaluated. Printed devices were post-processed with ultraviolet (UV) light and solvent baths to reduce PCR inhibiting residuals and further treated with silane coupling agents to passivate the surface, thereby limiting biomolecular adsorption occurences during the reaction. The printed devices were evaluated on a purpose-built infrared (IR) mediated PCR thermocycler. Amplification of 75 base pair long target sequences from genomic DNA templates on fluorosilane and glass modified chips produced amplicons consistent with the control reactions, unlike the non-silanized chips that produced faint or no amplicon. The results indicated good functionality of the IR thermocycler and good PCR compatibility of the printed and silanized SLA polymer. Based on the proposed methods, various microfluidic designs and ideas can be validated in-house at negligible costs without the requirement of tool manufacturing and workshop or clean-room access. Additionally, the versatile chemistry of 3D printing resins enables customised surface properties adding significant value to the printed prototypes. Considering the low setup and unit cost, design flexibility and flexible resin chemistries, DLP-SLA is anticipated to play a key role in future prototyping of microfluidics, particularly in the fields of research biology and molecular diagnostics. From a system point-of-view, the proposed method of thermocycling shows promise for portability and modular integration of funcitonalitites for diagnostic or research applications that utilize nucleic acid amplification technology. Public Library of Science 2020-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7592796/ /pubmed/33112867 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240237 Text en © 2020 Tzivelekis et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tzivelekis, Charalampos
Sgardelis, Pavlos
Waldron, Kevin
Whalley, Richard
Huo, Dehong
Dalgarno, Kenny
Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification
title Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification
title_full Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification
title_fullStr Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification
title_full_unstemmed Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification
title_short Fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3D-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification
title_sort fabrication routes via projection stereolithography for 3d-printing of microfluidic geometries for nucleic acid amplification
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7592796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33112867
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240237
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