Scalable Device for Automated Microbial Electroporation in a Digital Microfluidic Platform
ACS Synthetic Biology 6(9): 1701-1709
Article 2017 English
Authors
AM
Andrew C. Madison
MR
Matthew Royal
FV
Frédéric Vigneault
Abstract
1 min read
Electrowetting-on-dielectric (EWD) digital microfluidic laboratory-on-a-chip platforms demonstrate excellent performance in automating labor-intensive protocols. When coupled with an on-chip electroporation capability, these systems hold promise for streamlining cumbersome processes such as multiplex automated genome engineering (MAGE). We integrated a single Ti:Au electroporation electrode into an otherwise standard parallel-plate EWD geometry to enable high-efficiency transformation of Escherichia coli with reporter plasmid DNA in a 200 nL droplet. Test devices exhibited robust operation with more than 10 transformation experiments performed per device without cross-contamination or failure. Despite intrinsic electric-field nonuniformity present in the EP/EWD device, the peak on-chip transformation efficiency was measured to be 8.6 ± 1.0 × 108 cfu·μg–1 for an average applied electric field strength of 2.25 ± 0.50 kV·mm–1. Cell survival and transformation fractions at this electroporation pulse strength were found to be 1.5 ± 0.3 and 2.3 ± 0.1%, respectively. Our work expands the EWD toolkit to include on-chip microbial electroporation and opens the possibility of scaling advanced genome engineering methods, like MAGE, into the submicroliter regime.
James A. Moore, Mohsen Nemat‐Gorgani, Andrew C. Madison, Melissa Sandahl, Srikoundinya Punnamaraju, Allen E. Eckhardt, Michael Pollack, Frédéric Vigneault, George M. Church, Richard B. Fair, Mark Horowitz, Peter B. Griffin
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