Issue 18, 2014

A novel picoliter droplet array for parallel real-time polymerase chain reaction based on double-inkjet printing

Abstract

We developed and characterized a novel picoliter droplet-in-oil array generated by a double-inkjet printing method on a uniform hydrophobic silicon chip specifically designed for quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analysis. Double-inkjet printing was proposed to efficiently address the evaporation issues of picoliter droplets during array generation on a planar substrate without the assistance of a humidifier or glycerol. The method utilizes piezoelectric inkjet printing equipment to precisely eject a reagent droplet into an oil droplet, which had first been dispensed on a hydrophobic and oleophobic substrate. No evaporation, random movement, or cross-contamination was observed during array fabrication and thermal cycling. We demonstrated the feasibility and effectiveness of this novel double-inkjet method for real-time PCR analysis. This method can readily produce multivolume droplet-in-oil arrays with volume variations ranging from picoliters to nanoliters. This feature would be useful for simultaneous multivolume PCR experiments aimed at wide and tunable dynamic ranges. These double-inkjet-based picoliter droplet arrays may have potential for multiplexed applications that require isolated containers for single-cell cultures, single molecular enzymatic assays, or digital PCR and provide an alternative option for generating droplet arrays on planar substrates without chemical patterning.

Graphical abstract: A novel picoliter droplet array for parallel real-time polymerase chain reaction based on double-inkjet printing

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 May 2014
Accepted
14 Jul 2014
First published
14 Jul 2014

Lab Chip, 2014,14, 3603-3610

Author version available

A novel picoliter droplet array for parallel real-time polymerase chain reaction based on double-inkjet printing

Y. Sun, X. Zhou and Y. Yu, Lab Chip, 2014, 14, 3603 DOI: 10.1039/C4LC00598H

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