This review looks at the efforts that are being made to modify the surface of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) microchannels, in order to enhance applicability in the field of microfluidics. Many surface modifications of PDMS have been performed for electrophoretic separations, but new modifications are being done for emerging applications such as heterogeneous immunoassays and cell-based bioassays. These new modification techniques are powerful because they impart biospecificity to the microchannel surfaces and reduce protein adsorption. Most of these applications require the use of aqueous or polar solvents, which makes surface modification a very important topic.
Poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) is a biomaterial that presents serious surface instability characterized by hydrophobicity recovery. Permanently hydrophilic PDMS surfaces were created using electrostatic self-assembly of polyethyleneimine and poly(acrylic acid) on top of a hydrolyzed poly(styrene-alt-maleic anhydride) base layer adsorbed on PDMS. Cross-linking of the polyelectrolyte multilayers (PEMS) by carbodiimide coupling and covalent attachment of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) chains to the PEMS produced stable, hydrophilic, protein-resistant coatings, which resisted hydrophobicity recovery in air. Attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy revealed that the thin films had excellent chemical stability and resisted hydrophobicity recovery in air over 77 days of measurement. The spectra also showed a dense coverage for PEG dialdehyde and excellent resistance to protein adsorption from undiluted rat serum. Atomic force microscopy revealed dense coverage with PEG dialdehyde and PEG diamine. Contact angle measurements showed that all films were hydrophilic and that the PEG dialdehyde-topped thin film had a virtually constant contact angle (approximately 20 degrees ) over the five months of the study. Electrokinetic analysis of the coatings in microchannels always exposed to air also gave good protein separation and constant electroosmotic flow during the five months that the measurements were done. We expect that the stable, hydrophilic, protein-resistant thin-film coatings will be useful for many applications that require long-term surface stability.
We present the current status of the development of microfluidic devices fabricated on different substrates for coupling with electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). Until now, much success has been gained in fabricating the ESI chips, which show better performances due to miniaturization when compared with traditional methods. Integration of multiple steps for sample preparation and ESI sample introduction, however, remains a great challenge. This review covers the main technical development of electrospray device that were published from 1997 to 2004. This article does not attempt to be exclusive. Instead, it focuses on the publications that illustrated the breath of the development and applications of microchip devices for MS-based analysis.
Poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) possesses many advantages, such as biocompatibility and high oxygen permeability, which makes it an attractive material for fabricating biodevices. Creating an affinity surface with long-term stability and reactivity for biomolecular interactions on a PDMS substrate, however, is difficult due to its inherent hydrophobicity. In this study, an affinity surface on a PDMS substrate with long-term hydrophilicity and affinity reactivity is reported. This modification is composed of two parts. The bottom part is made of polyelectrolyte multilayers and is capable of providing long-term hydrophilic stability. The top part consists of three protein layers, bovine serum albumin (BSA), anti-BSA, and protein G, and offers an affinity surface for antibody binding and, more importantly, provides favorable orientation and minimum nonspecific binding. The chemical modification for the different stages was monitored by atomic force microscopy (AFM), attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FT-IR), and contact angle and fluorescence measurements. A long-term PDMS immunodevice (LPID) based on polyelectrolyte multilayers and protein layers was fabricated and applied to the detection of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) protein in mouse serum by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) method. Results show that a linear calibration curve was obtained in the concentration range from 500 to 15.125 pg/mL, and the relative standard deviation was less than 3%. Also, the amount of TGF-beta spiked in mouse serum was precisely determined. Results indicate that the modified surface was hydrophilic and reactive to biospecies up to more than 7 days in its dry form. Moreover, the blocking reagent used to reduce nonspecific binding was found to be not necessary for the LPID. Thus, the reported method is expected to hold a great potential for fabricating PDMS-based affinity devices such as protein chips.
Integration of a hydrogel and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based microfluidic device can greatly reduce the cost of developing channel-based devices. However, there are technical difficulties including the hydrophobic and inert surface properties associated with PDMS as well as back pressure and fragile material associated with the use of hydrogel in microchannels. In this study, a strategy to covalently photopattern 3-D hydrogel plugs with functionalized protein G inside microfluidic channels on a hydrophilic PDMS substrate coated with polyelectrolyte multilayers (PEMS) is presented. In this process, a UV-light microscope is applied to initiate the protein G-poly(acryl amide) copolymerization from the bulk substrate to solution areas via the deeply implanted photoinitiator (PI), resulting in sturdy 3D plugs covalently bonded to the upper and lower channel wall, while leaving open spaces in the channel width for the fluid to flow through. In addition, the long-term hydrophilicity and low nonspecific binding property associated with PEMS surface can be conserved for the nonpatterned area, leading to hydrogel plugs in extremely hydrophilic and permeable environment in a restricted channel space for bubble-free fluid transport and affinity interaction. By immobilization of well-oriented antibodies via protein G on the hydrogel plugs in the channel, estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) is demonstrated to be captured quantitatively with high loading capacity and high specificity.
The binding of estrogen receptor (ER) to estrogen response element (ERE) is essential for genomic pathways of estrogens and gel-based electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) is commonly used for analyzing ERE binding. Gel-based EMSA, however, requires the use of hazard radio isotopes and they are slow, labor-intensive and difficult to quantify. Here, we present quantitative affinity assays based on microchip electrophoresis using PEG-modified glass microchannels, which bear neutral surfaces against the adsorption of acidic DNA molecules and basic ER proteins. We first demonstrated the feasibility of the method by measuring binding constants of recombinant ERalpha and ERbeta with a consensus ERE sequence (cERE, 5'-GGTCAGAGTGACC-3') as well as with an ERE-like sequence (ERE 1576, 5'-GACCGGTCAGCGGACTCAC-3'). Changes in mobility as a function of protein-DNA molar ratios were plotted and the dissociation constants were determined based on non-linear curve fitting. The minimum amount of ER proteins required for one assay was around 0.2 ng and the run time for one chip analysis was less than 2 min. We further measured the estrogenic compound-mediated dissociation constants with recombinant ER proteins as well as with the extracted ERbeta from treated and untreated A549 bronchioloalveolar carcinoma cells. Dissociation constants determined by this method agree with the fact that agonist compounds such as 17beta-estradiol (1.70 nM), diethylstilbestrol (0.14 nM), and genistein (0.80 nM) assist ERE binding by decreasing the constants; while antagonist compounds such as testosterone (140.4 nM) and 4-hydroxytamoxifen (10.5 nM) suppress the binding by increasing the dissociation constant.
In this work, a semihydrodynamic (SHD) injection method was introduced and coupled with high salt stacking and electrokinetic chromatography for the analysis of estrogen and estrogen binding using a simple cross microchannel. The SHD method allows all samples to be hydrodynamically injected and focused into the separation channel at a relatively high flow rate and without splitting and diffusion, leading to reproducible bias-free injections of larger sample volumes (up to 50 nL) within 3 s. Moreover, the injection method is initiated without voltage switching, leading to a reduced mixing effect. Such advantages are well suited for performing stacking and sweeping on a microchip. We investigated the stacking effect under continuous and discontinuous co-ion conditions as well as under sweeping conditions. Micellar sweeping effect alone was relatively weak (7-8 times), partly due to a lower sodium cholate concentration (30 mM) used for the running buffer. By combining the sweeping effect with high salt stacking, however, up to a 200-300-fold enhancement factor could be achieved, and the high-salt and low-surfactant contents for the running buffer were favorable for binding study under nonequilibrium conditions. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of the hydrodynamic injection used for high salt sample stacking on a microchip, also for further combining micellar electrochromatography and affinity separation for the analysis of hydrophobic ligand binding using microchip electrophoresis.
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