Abstract
We present a versatile tool for the generation of monodisperse water-in-fluorinated-oil droplets in standard reaction tubes by centrifugal step emulsification. The microfluidic cartridge is designed as an insert into a standard 2 mL reaction tube and can be processed in standard laboratory centrifuges. It allows for droplet generation and subsequent transfer for any downstream analysis or further use, does not need any specialized device, and manufacturing is simple because it consists of two parts only: A structured substrate and a sealing foil. The design of the structured substrate is compatible to injection molding to allow manufacturing at large scale. Droplets are generated in fluorinated oil and collected in the reaction tube for subsequent analysis. For sample sizes up to 100 µL with a viscosity range of 1 mPa·s–4 mPa·s, we demonstrate stable droplet generation and transfer of more than 6 × 105 monodisperse droplets (droplet diameter 66 µm ± 3 µm, CV ≤ 4%) in less than 10 min. With two application examples, a digital droplet polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) and digital droplet loop mediated isothermal amplification (ddLAMP), we demonstrate the compatibility of the droplet production for two main amplification techniques. Both applications show a high degree of linearity (ddPCR: R2 ≥ 0.994; ddLAMP: R2 ≥ 0.998), which demonstrates that the cartridge and the droplet generation method do not compromise assay performance.
Highlights
Water-in-oil (W/O) droplets are widely used for the generation of micro-compartments that find application in various biochemical reactions
A digital droplet polymerase chain reaction and digital droplet loop mediated isothermal amplification, we demonstrate the compatibility of the droplet production for two main amplification techniques
Both applications show a high degree of linearity, which demonstrates that the cartridge and the droplet generation method do not compromise assay performance
Summary
Water-in-oil (W/O) droplets are widely used for the generation of micro-compartments that find application in various biochemical reactions. (ii) Off-chip systems, where the droplets are transferred into a reaction tube and downstream analysis and/or further manipulation steps are performed in bulk [4,17,18,19,20]. From an application point of view, devices of the first category offer an ideal method for direct quantification of digital assays but require the use of specialized equipment. This is different for off-chip systems, where the droplets are transferred into an external container (e.g., reaction tube) after droplet generation. Depending on the application needs, the droplets can be Molecules 2020, 25, 1914; doi:10.3390/molecules25081914 www.mdpi.com/journal/molecules
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