Solid-Phase Reversible Immobilization in Microfluidic Chips for the Purification of Dye-Labeled DNA Sequencing Fragments
- 22 May 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 75 (13) , 2975-2984
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac030031n
Abstract
In this manuscript, we discuss the use of photoactivated polycarbonate (PC) for purification of dye-labeled terminator sequencing fragments using solid-phase reversible immobilization (SPRI) prior to gel electrophoretic sorting of these DNAs. An immobilization bed for the DNA purification was produced by exposing a posted microchannel to UV radiation, which induced a surface photooxidation reaction, resulting in the production of carboxylate groups. The immobilization microchannel contained microposts to increase the loading level of DNAs to improve signal intensity without the need for preconcentration. By suspending the sequencing cocktail in an immobilization buffer (TEG/ethanol), the DNA fragments demonstrated a high affinity for this carboxylated surface. The loading density of DNAs to this activated surface was found to be 3.9 pmol cm-2. The captured DNA could be subsequently released from the surface by incubation with ddH2O. SPRI cleanup of dye-terminator sequencing fragments using the photoactivated PC chip and slab gel electrophoresis produced a read length comparable to the conventional SPRI format, which utilized carboxylated magnetic beads and a magnetic field. The read length for the PC−SPRI format was found to be 620 bases with a calling accuracy of 98.9%. The PC−SPRI cleanup format was also integrated to a capillary gel electrophoresis (CGE) system. The PC−SPRI method was shown to effectively remove excess dye terminator from the CGE tract, but yielded lower plate numbers, as compared to a direct injection method with purification accomplished off-chip. The loss in efficiency was found to result primarily from the extended injection time associated with the microchip purification method.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Sequence of the Human GenomeScience, 2001
- Federal research publishing houses?Analytical Chemistry, 1999
- A Magnetic Attraction to High-Throughput GenomicsScience, 1997
- Fully Automated DNA Reaction and Analysis in a Fluidic Capillary InstrumentAnalytical Chemistry, 1997
- DNA sequencing by capillary electrophoresisElectrophoresis, 1997
- Far-Ultraviolet Degradation of Selected PolymersPublished by American Chemical Society (ACS) ,1996
- Integrated Microdevice for DNA Restriction Fragment AnalysisAnalytical Chemistry, 1996
- Ultra-High-Speed DNA Sequencing Using Capillary Electrophoresis ChipsAnalytical Chemistry, 1995
- High-speed separations of DNA sequencing reactions by capillary electrophoresisAnalytical Chemistry, 1990
- Comparison of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Thermal Maximum, and Scavenging Techniques for Rate MeasurementThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1965