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MICROFLUIDIC MICROARRAY ASSEMBLY AND ITS APPLICATIONS TO MULTI-SAMPLE DNA HYBRIDIZATION Xing Yue (Larry) Peng 1, 2, Paul C.H. Li 1, Lin Wang 1, Hua-Zhong (Hogan) Yu 1, Ash M. Parameswaran 1, Wa Lok (Jacky) Chou 1 1 Simon Fraser University, CANADA, 2Xiamen University, CHINA ABSTRACT A microfluidic microarray assembly (MMA) concept has been developed for multi-sample DNA hybridization. Both the creation of the microarray and the hybridization of DNA samples are achieved by microfluidic flow in microchannels without the robotic spotting procedure. By centrifugal force pumping in CD-like chips, 96 samples were tested simultaneously and the hybridization process could be performed in 3 minutes. The detection limit is down to one femtomole of oligonucleotide. Keywords: DNA microarray; Spiral microchannels; Centrifugal pumping; Multi-sample DNA hybridization. 1. INTRODUCTION Currently, in the use of microarrays, only one sample can be applied on a microarray slide at a time [1]. However, in analysis such as clinical diagnostics, multiple samples were usually involved, and tens of thousands of DNA probes may not always be needed. Therefore, a MMA method has been developed to create a DNA probe microarray as well as to apply it to multiple DNA samples. In this concept, there were two channels plates fabricated with polydimethylsilioxane (PDMS) while an aldehyde glass chip served as the microarray substrate (Figure 1). In the first step, channel plate 1 was assembled with the glass chip via reversible bonding between PDMS and glass. Aminated DNA probes were introduced into the microchannels and were immobilized on the glass chip. A line microarray was thus created. After peeling off plate 1, channel Peel off PDMS channel plate 1 1) Sealed against an aldehyde glass chip 2) Flow of aminated DNA probe solution 6-Line microarray of DNA probes immobilized on glass chip Channel plate 1 with 6 microchannels 1) Sealed against the glass chip with line microarray 1) Peel off PDMS channel plate 2 2) Flow of DNA sample solution 2) Scan with confocal fluorescence scanner Channel plate 2 with 6 microchannels Hybridization with probes in microchannels Detection results Figure 1. Schematic diagram for the MMA concept plate 2 was then assembled with the same glass chip. The sample solution flowed through the line microarray and hybridization could be fulfilled in a few minutes. Both the creation of probe microarray and hybridization process in a microfluidic channel was capable of reducing the sample volume (down to 1.0 µL) and of preventing from evaporation and cross-contamination. Based on the MMA concept, CD-like plates were developed further to facilitate liquid transport as well as the rapid removal of non-specifically adsorbed materials within the channels. Centrifugal pumping was used for liquid transport in a similar manner as other research groups [2, 3]. What is new here is the two-time use of centrifugal pumping, first along radial channels and then along spiral channels. As shown in Figure 2, 96 RADIAL and SPIRAL microchannels were 1 cast on plate 1 and plate 2, respectively. The spiral pattern was specially designed to balance the centrifugal force and viscous drag force to ensure a steady flow of sample solution. At room temperature, it has been demonstrated that one femotomole DNA (1nM, 1nL) could be detected in three minutes. This concept allows a much higher density than attained using parallel channels [4]. Figure 2. PDMS channel plates 1 and 2 each containing 96 channels 2. EXPERIMENTAL Two aminated single-stranded DNA (AD6: H2N-CGCCGATGGACAAAACTTAAA; AB1: H2N-CGCCAGAGAATACCAAAACTC) as probes and their complementary single-stranded DNA (D6' and B1') labeled with fluorescein or Cy5 as samples were synthesized and purified by Sigma-Genosys. The glass slides or wafers were chemically modified to give aldehyde surfaces. PDMS plates were made by molding on silicon wafers with 96 microchannels of 100 µm width and 20 µm depth. The optimization of immobilization and hybridization conditions was performed on glass slides. The fluorescent signal was then detected with a scanner (Typhoon 9410). When using CD-like chips, channel plate 1 was assembled first on the glass wafer and spun at 500 RPM. Solutions of different DNA probes flowed through the 96 RADIAL microchannels to initiate the immobilization. After removing channel plate 1 and assembling the channel plate 2, different DNA samples were applied into the 96 SPIRAL microchannels at 1800 RPM to complete the hybridization reactions. 3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Replicates of sample DNA concentration: 1 µM D6'-F 50 µM 20 µM 10 µM 5 µM Replicates of 30 µM of probe DNA (AD6) Probe Concentration 100 µM 1 µM DNA sample (D6'-F) solution Without SDS With 0.15% SDS 2 µM Figure 3. Effect of DNA probe (AD6) conc. Figure 4. Effect of SDS in sample solution Replicates of 30µM of probe DNA (AD6) As shown in Figure 3, different concentrations of AD6 probes were immobilized on an aldehyde glass chip (with the first channel plate) for hybridizing with 1 µM of D6'-F. The use of 20 µM of immobilized probe DNA was found to be enough to achieve the hybridization results. Hybridization for 3 min Hybridization for 45 min The effect of sodium dodecylsulfonate (SDS) on hybridization was also studied. From Figure 4 it can be seen that the 0.15% SDS in sample solution can effectively prevent non-specific adsorption of DNA samples to the glass substrate. Without SDS, streak of D6'-F was seen along the vertical channels due to non-specific adsorption. Figure 5 shows the effect of 1 0.1 0.01 1 0.1 0.01 Sample DNA (D6'-F ) concentration (µM) hybridization time on the signal intensity of microarray detection. Figure 5. Effect of hybridization time A hybridization time of 3 minutes is enough to achieve results for 3 different sample concentrations. Full 96-probe-96-sample 2 hybridization was achieved on a CD-like glass chip. The circular microarray generated by the MMA is mathematically transformed into a 96×96 rectangular array (Figure 6). Samples with 2 different volumes and 8 concentrations were tested. The signal increased with the sample volume. Specific hybridization can be seen both at reduced image sensitivity (bottom inset) and enhanced image sensitivity (top inset).The detection limit was one femtomole of oligonucleotide, that is, both 1µL of 1 nM DNA sample and 10 µL of 0.1 nM DNA sample can be detected. A: amino CGCCGATGGACAAAACTTAAA. B: amino CGCCAGAGAATACCAAAACTC. A': The complementary of A labeled by Cy5. B': The complementary of B labeled by Cy5. Figure 6. The fluorescent image of the hybridization results on CD-like chips 5. CONCLUSIONS In the MMA method, both probe immobilization and DNA hybridization were achieved within microchannels. No expensive probe spotting equipment is needed and a low-volume (1 µL) of samples can be applied without a lengthy incubation step. Compared with the routine microfluidic pumping methods (pressure-driven flow, electroosmotic flow), centrifugal pumping is easy to implement simply by spinning the CD-like chip at a high speed. 96 samples could thus be detected simultaneously with a detection limit of one femtomole. REFERENCES [1] G. H. W. Sanders and A. Manz, Trends in Analytical Chemistry, 2000, 19, 364-378. [2] M. J. Felton, Modern Drug Discovery, 2003, 6(11), 35-39. [3] G. Jia, K. Ma, J. Kim, S. K. Deo, S. Daunert, R. Peytavi, M. G. Bergeron, J.V. Zoval and M.J. Madou, Proceedings of SPIE International Symposium-Photonics Europe, April 26-30, 2004, Strasbourg, France. [4] R. H. Liu, H. Chen, K. R. Luehrsen, D. Ganser, D. Weston, J. Blackwell and P. Grodzinski, MEMS 2001. The 14th IEEE International Conference, January 21-25, 2001, 439 - 442 3