In-Droplet Electrophoretic Separation and Enrichment of Biomolecules.

Anal Chem

Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zürich, Mattenstrasse 26, 4058 Basel, Switzerland.

Published: June 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study showcases a method for separating and enriching molecules, like small organic compounds and long nucleic acids, using electric potentials applied through specialized electrodes interfaced with nanodroplets.
  • The technique features PDMS-carbon composite membranes that create uniform electric fields inside droplets, allowing biomolecules of varying sizes and charges to migrate and concentrate on one side of the droplets.
  • The results indicate that enrichment efficiency surpasses 95% for small, highly charged molecules at specific velocities, showcasing potential for high-throughput separation and selective separation of peptide fragments based on their net charge.

Article Abstract

We demonstrate the in-droplet separation and enrichment of molecules from small organic molecules to long nucleic acids (lambda DNA). Electric potentials are applied via two parallel three-dimensional electrodes, which interface the nanodroplets through polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-carbon composite membranes. These membranes enable the generation of uniform electric fields inside the droplets, while simultaneously preventing the formation of electrolytic byproducts. Biomolecules of different sizes migrate toward one side of the droplets, according to their net charge, when exposed to the electric field. Directly afterward, a Y-junction promotes droplet splitting, resulting in the generation of biomolecule-enriched daughter droplets. Biomolecules were fluorescently labeled, and fluorescence microscopy was employed to assess their electrophoretic separation and enrichment. Experimental results demonstrate how the enrichment of biomolecules is influenced by their size, charge, and concentration, by the ionic strength, viscosity, and pH of the suspending medium, and by the in-droplet flow profile. Enrichments above 95% were observed for small molecules and highly charged species at velocities over 10 mm/s (13 droplets per second). Moreover, the enrichment performance asymptotically approached a value of 38% for velocities as high as 50 mm/s, demonstrating the potential of this technique for the high-throughput separation of charged species. The applicability of the system was demonstrated by cleaving a peptide and selectively separating the cleaved fragments in different daughter droplets on the basis of their net charge.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7612497PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.0c01044DOI Listing

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