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Scalable Device for Automated Microbial Electroporation in a Digital Microfluidic Platform.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Madison, AC; Royal, MW; Vigneault, F; Chen, L; Griffin, PB; Horowitz, M; Church, GM; Fair, RB
Published in: ACS synthetic biology
September 2017

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.

Duke Scholars

Published In

ACS synthetic biology

DOI

EISSN

2161-5063

ISSN

2161-5063

Publication Date

September 2017

Volume

6

Issue

9

Start / End Page

1701 / 1709

Related Subject Headings

  • Transformation, Bacterial
  • Transfection
  • Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Robotics
  • Microelectrodes
  • Lab-On-A-Chip Devices
  • Escherichia coli
  • Equipment Failure Analysis
  • Equipment Design
  • Electroporation
 

Citation

APA
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MLA
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Madison, A. C., Royal, M. W., Vigneault, F., Chen, L., Griffin, P. B., Horowitz, M., … Fair, R. B. (2017). Scalable Device for Automated Microbial Electroporation in a Digital Microfluidic Platform. ACS Synthetic Biology, 6(9), 1701–1709. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.7b00007
Madison, Andrew C., Matthew W. Royal, Frederic Vigneault, Liji Chen, Peter B. Griffin, Mark Horowitz, George M. Church, and Richard B. Fair. “Scalable Device for Automated Microbial Electroporation in a Digital Microfluidic Platform.ACS Synthetic Biology 6, no. 9 (September 2017): 1701–9. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.7b00007.
Madison AC, Royal MW, Vigneault F, Chen L, Griffin PB, Horowitz M, et al. Scalable Device for Automated Microbial Electroporation in a Digital Microfluidic Platform. ACS synthetic biology. 2017 Sep;6(9):1701–9.
Madison, Andrew C., et al. “Scalable Device for Automated Microbial Electroporation in a Digital Microfluidic Platform.ACS Synthetic Biology, vol. 6, no. 9, Sept. 2017, pp. 1701–09. Epmc, doi:10.1021/acssynbio.7b00007.
Madison AC, Royal MW, Vigneault F, Chen L, Griffin PB, Horowitz M, Church GM, Fair RB. Scalable Device for Automated Microbial Electroporation in a Digital Microfluidic Platform. ACS synthetic biology. 2017 Sep;6(9):1701–1709.
Journal cover image

Published In

ACS synthetic biology

DOI

EISSN

2161-5063

ISSN

2161-5063

Publication Date

September 2017

Volume

6

Issue

9

Start / End Page

1701 / 1709

Related Subject Headings

  • Transformation, Bacterial
  • Transfection
  • Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Robotics
  • Microelectrodes
  • Lab-On-A-Chip Devices
  • Escherichia coli
  • Equipment Failure Analysis
  • Equipment Design
  • Electroporation