Muddu Radha, Hassan Yassin A, Ugaz Victor M
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Texas A&M University, USA.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Mar 5(49):2366. doi: 10.3791/2366.
Many molecular biology assays depend in some way on the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify an initially dilute target DNA sample to a detectable concentration level. But the design of conventional PCR thermocycling hardware, predominantly based on massive metal heating blocks whose temperature is regulated by thermoelectric heaters, severely limits the achievable reaction speed(1). Considerable electrical power is also required to repeatedly heat and cool the reagent mixture, limiting the ability to deploy these instruments in a portable format. Thermal convection has emerged as a promising alternative thermocycling approach that has the potential to overcome these limitations(2-9). Convective flows are an everyday occurrence in a diverse array of settings ranging from the Earth's atmosphere, oceans, and interior, to decorative and colorful lava lamps. Fluid motion is initiated in the same way in each case: a buoyancy driven instability arises when a confined volume of fluid is subjected to a spatial temperature gradient. These same phenomena offer an attractive way to perform PCR thermocycling. By applying a static temperature gradient across an appropriately designed reactor geometry, a continuous circulatory flow can be established that will repeatedly transport PCR reagents through temperature zones associated with the denaturing, annealing, and extension stages of the reaction (Figure 1). Thermocycling can therefore be actuated in a pseudo-isothermal manner by simply holding two opposing surfaces at fixed temperatures, completely eliminating the need to repeatedly heat and cool the instrument. One of the main challenges facing design of convective thermocyclers is the need to precisely control the spatial velocity and temperature distributions within the reactor to ensure that the reagents sequentially occupy the correct temperature zones for a sufficient period of time(10,11). Here we describe results of our efforts to probe the full 3-D velocity and temperature distributions in microscale convective thermocyclers(12). Unexpectedly, we have discovered a subset of complex flow trajectories that are highly favorable for PCR due to a synergistic combination of (1) continuous exchange among flow paths that provides an enhanced opportunity for reagents to sample the full range of optimal temperature profiles, and (2) increased time spent within the extension temperature zone the rate limiting step of PCR. Extremely rapid DNA amplification times (under 10 min) are achievable in reactors designed to generate these flows.
许多分子生物学检测在某种程度上依赖聚合酶链反应(PCR),以将初始稀释的目标DNA样本扩增至可检测的浓度水平。但是,传统PCR热循环硬件的设计主要基于大型金属加热块,其温度由热电加热器调节,这严重限制了可实现的反应速度(1)。反复加热和冷却试剂混合物也需要大量电力,限制了以便携式形式部署这些仪器的能力。热对流已成为一种有前途的替代热循环方法,有可能克服这些限制(2 - 9)。对流在从地球大气、海洋和内部到装饰性彩色熔岩灯等各种不同环境中都是常见现象。在每种情况下,流体运动都是以相同方式启动的:当有限体积的流体受到空间温度梯度作用时,会出现浮力驱动的不稳定性。这些相同的现象为进行PCR热循环提供了一种有吸引力的方式。通过在适当设计的反应器几何形状上施加静态温度梯度,可以建立连续循环流,该循环流将使PCR试剂反复通过与反应的变性、退火和延伸阶段相关的温度区域(图1)。因此,通过简单地将两个相对表面保持在固定温度,热循环可以以准等温方式启动,完全消除了反复加热和冷却仪器的需要。对流热循环仪设计面临的主要挑战之一是需要精确控制反应器内的空间速度和温度分布,以确保试剂在足够长的时间内依次占据正确的温度区域(10,11)。在此,我们描述了我们在探测微型对流热循环仪中完整三维速度和温度分布方面所做努力的结果(12)。出乎意料的是,我们发现了一组复杂的流动轨迹,由于以下协同组合,这些轨迹对PCR非常有利:(1)流路之间的连续交换,为试剂提供了更多机会来采样整个最佳温度分布范围;(2)在延伸温度区域内停留时间增加,这是PCR的限速步骤。在设计用于产生这些流动的反应器中,可以实现极快的DNA扩增时间(不到10分钟)。