Abstract

A general approach is described for array-based biochemical sensing that uses contact-free dispersal of compounds into addressable microfabricated reactors. The arrays are composed of 1 to 100 nL volume open reactors that have been microfabricated on quartz substrates using lithography. The open architecture of these reactors allows them to be addressed in parallel or individually with an ink-jet arrayer that is capable of distributing 0.004 to 1 nL volumes of reagents. A seven-step biochemical assay has been conducted on a small array of reactors to demonstrate how they can be integrated with an ink-jet arrayer and optical detector. This nanoreactor assay format appears to overcome several limitations that chip-based microarray technology currently imposes on protein assays: the arrays can be created in a manner that does not expose the biochemical reagents to osmotic stress, independent reactions can be conducted in individual reactors, and the conditions in all of the reactors (e.g., concentration and pH) can be rapidly scanned. We believe that these nanoreactor arrays will be useful for biochemical sensing that involves delicate proteins and protein assemblies.

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