PCR-Free MicroRNA Quantification Based on Ion-Selective Nanoporous Membranes and Nanopores
Hsueh-Chia Chang, Bayer Professor of Engineering / Director, University of Notre Dame
We report an integrated biochip platform that can identify and quantify
low copy numbers of microRNA biomarkers in a heterogeneous physiological
sample like blood, saliva or urine. This quantification assay is done
without PCR amplification, reporter labeling, extensive off-chip
pretreatment and expensive optical sensors. Consequently, it does not
introduce PCR/ligation bias and limits analyte loss during
pretreatment. The main components of the integrated biochips are
nanoporous membranes and solid-state nanopores with pore radii smaller
than the nm-scale Debye length. We use the ion concentration and charge
polarization features of the ion-selective membranes to control the
on-chip ionic strength, actuate pH by splitting water, lyse exosomes and
isolate/concentrate the target molecules. The final nanopore sensor or
sensor array utilizes surface modification and pore geometry to
preferentially delay the translocation time of the target microRNAs to
achieve single-molecule identification and quantification. The
integrated chip achieves a translocation frequency (throughput) that is
at least one hundred times higher than any literature or commercial
nanopore technology.
|
|