Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0038, United States .
Faraday Discuss. 2011;149:159-70; discussion 227-45. doi: 10.1039/c005326k.
Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) is currently a gold standard in identifying influenza A virus, especially H1N1 flu. Typical RT-PCR assays take about 1-2 h for thermocycling, and there is a growing need to further speed up the thermocycling to less than 30 min. Additionally, the PCR assay system should be made portable as a point-of-care detection tool. There have been attempts to further speed up the PCR assays by reducing its volume. There have also been attempts to use droplet microfluidics technology to PCR, primarily to automate the PCR enrichment processes and take advantage of its small volume. In all these attempts, heating and cooling is made by conduction heat transfer. Rapid movements of droplets (immersed in oil) over three different temperature zones make very quick PCR possible, as heating/cooling will be made by convection heat transfer, whose heat transfer coefficients are much higher than that of conduction. We used our newly-invented method of wire-guide droplet manipulations towards very quick RT-PCR. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation of our system revealed that heating/cooling for each temperature change takes 1-4 s for a 10 microL droplet, as compared to >30 s in the other quick PCRs. Theoretically a 30-cycle process can take as short as 13 s x 30 cycles = 6 min 30 s. The entire system was made as a single instrument, with the components made by a milling machine and a rapid prototyping device. No additional equipment and external computers are required. With this newly developed system, 160 bp gene sequence was amplified from 2009 H1N1 influenza A (human origin). The 30-cycle process took as short as 6 min 50 s for a 10 microL droplet (with additional 4 min for reverse transcription). Its product was confirmed by traditional gel electrophoresis, subsequent imaging as well as gene sequencing, which has been very difficult with the other stationary droplet/nanodrop approaches. The proposed system has a potential to become an extremely rapid, portable, point-of-care tool for detecting influenza A.
逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)是目前鉴定甲型流感病毒(尤其是 H1N1 流感)的金标准。典型的 RT-PCR 检测大约需要 1-2 小时进行热循环,并且越来越需要进一步将热循环时间缩短至 30 分钟以内。此外,PCR 检测系统应作为即时检测工具实现便携化。已经有尝试通过减少其体积来进一步加快 PCR 检测。也有尝试使用液滴微流控技术进行 PCR,主要是为了自动化 PCR 富集过程并利用其小体积。在所有这些尝试中,通过热传导进行加热和冷却。液滴(浸没在油中)在三个不同温度区的快速运动使得非常快速的 PCR 成为可能,因为通过对流热传递进行加热/冷却,其传热系数远高于热传导。我们使用我们新发明的线引导液滴操作方法进行非常快速的 RT-PCR。我们系统的计算流体动力学(CFD)模拟表明,对于 10μL 的液滴,每次温度变化的加热/冷却时间为 1-4s,而在其他快速 PCR 中则需要>30s。理论上,30 个循环的过程最短可以在 13s×30 个循环=6 分 30 秒内完成。整个系统被制成一个单一的仪器,其组件由铣床和快速成型设备制成。不需要额外的设备和外部计算机。使用这个新开发的系统,从 2009 年 H1N1 流感病毒(人类起源)中扩增出了 160bp 的基因序列。对于 10μL 的液滴,30 个循环的过程最短可以在 6 分 50 秒内完成(额外的 4 分钟用于逆转录)。通过传统的凝胶电泳、后续成像以及基因测序确认了其产物,这在其他固定液滴/纳滴方法中是非常困难的。该系统有可能成为一种极其快速、便携、即时检测流感 A 的工具。