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Lab-on-a-Chip
Device from Berkeley Lab to Speed Proteomics Research
05/02/07
This
zoom-in Scanning Electron Microscope image shows a
five-nozzle M3 emitter, where each nozzle measures 10x12
microns.
Credit:
Berkeley Lab
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In recent years, the
science of biology has been dominated by genomics – the
study of genes and their functions. The genomics era is now
making way for the era of proteomics – the study of the
proteins that genes encode.
Future proteomics research
should see a substantial acceleration with the development of a
new device that provides the first monolithic interface between
mass spectrometry and silicon/silica-based microfluidic
“lab-on-a-chip” technologies. This new device, called
a multinozzle nanoelectrospray emitter array, was developed by
scientists with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).
“Proteomics has become an
indispensable tool in biological research, be it diagnostics,
therapeutics, bioenergy or stem cell research, and mass
spectrometry is proteomics’ enabling technology,”
said Daojing Wang, a scientist with Berkeley Lab’s Life
Sciences Division who leads the proteomics research group and was
the principal investigator behind the development of the
multinozzle nanoelectrospray emitter.
“Lab-on-a-chip technology
has enormous potential for proteomics research,” Wang said,
“but for this potential to be fully realized, a major
advance in interfacing microfluidics with mass spectrometry is
needed. Our device provides that interface.”
Wang and Peidong Yang, a
leading nanoscience authority with Berkeley Lab’s Molecular
Foundry and Materials Sciences Division, and also a chemistry
professor with the University of California’s Berkeley
campus, co-authored a paper on this work which is being published
by the American Chemical Society (ACS). The paper, which is now
available in the on-line version. is entitled: “Microfabricated
Monolithic Multinozzle Emitters for Nanoelectrospray Mass
Spectrometry.”
Other authors of the ACS paper
were Woong Kim, a postdoctoral fellow in the Molecular Foundry,
and Mingquan Guo, a postdoctoral fellow in the Life Sciences
Division.
When the Human Genome Project
was completed in 2003, giving scientists a complete catalogue of
human DNA, the next big effort focused on genomics, identifying
DNA sequences that code for proteins, aka, genes. With the
identification of each and every new gene, the emphasis shifts to
determining the biochemical function of its associated proteins.
All biological cells are
constructed from aggregations of proteins that interact with
other protein aggregations like an elaborate, finely
choreographed network of interdependent machines. This
biomolecular machinery also controls nearly every chemical
process inside a cell, and forms much of the connectivity that
enable cells to come together into tissues and organs. One of the
first steps in proteomics research is to determine the identity
and modifications of individual proteins that make up a cell or
tissue sample. The principal means of doing this is through mass
spectrometry.
Mass spectrometers use a
combination of ionization and magnets to separate a protein’s
constituent peptides. Detection and analysis of this mass
spectrum can then be used to identify the protein and quantify
its presence in a sample. The most popular technique today for
ionizing a protein’s constituents for mass spectrometry is
to liquefy the protein and send it through electrically charged
capillaries – a technique known as electrospray ionization.
One of the best candidates for high throughput integration of the
detection and analysis processes is to interface the mass
spectrometers with lab-on-a-chip technology, where biological
fluids are introduced onto a microprocessor chip. However,
microfluidic analysis of proteins has been a separate process
from mass spectrometry - until now.
“Ours is the first report
of a silicon/silica microfluidic channel that is integrated
monolithically with a multinozzle nanoelectrospray emitter,”
said Wang. “This paves the way for the large scale
integration of mass spectrometry and lab-on-a-chip analysis in
proteomics research.”
Each emitter consists of a
parallel array of silica nozzles protruding out from a hollow
silicon sliver with a conduit size of 100 x 10 microns. Multiple
nozzles (100 nozzles per millimeter was a typical density) were
used rather than single nozzles in order to reduce the pressure
and clogging problems that arise as the microfluidic channels on
a chip downsize to a nanometer scale. The emitters and their
nozzles were produced from a silicon wafer, with the dimension
and number of nozzles systematically and precisely controlled
during the fabrication process. Fabrication required the use of
only a single mask and involved photolithographic patterning and
various etching processes.
Said Peidong Yang, “Once
integrated with a mass spectrometer, our microfabricated
monolithic multinozzle emitters achieved a sensitivity and
stability in peptide and protein detection comparable to
commercial silica-based capillary nanoelectrospray tips. This
indicates that our emitters could serve as a critical component
in a fully integrated silicon/silica-based micro total analysis
system for proteomics.”
Added Daojing Wang, “This
is also the first report of a multinozzle emitter that can be
fabricated through standard microfabrication processes. In
addition to having lower back pressure and higher sensitivity,
multinozzle emitters also provide a means to systematically study
the electrospray ionization processes because the size of each
nozzle and density of nozzles on the emitters can be adjusted.”
According to Wang and Yang, the
fabrication and application of the microfabricated monolithic
multinozzle emitters, called “M3 emitters”
for short, could be commercialized immediately and should be
highly competitive with current silica capillary emitters in
terms of cost and mass production.
“We are now in the
process of creating a chip that integrates sample processing and
preparation as well as detection and analysis,” said Wang.
“The ability to perform the full process on a single chip
has enormous commercial potential.”
Berkeley lab has filed for a
patent on this technology. The research was supported by a grant
from the National Institutes of Health, with some of the work
done at Berkeley Lab’s Molecular Foundry, which is
supported by the Office of Science in the U.S. Department of
Energy.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S.
Department of Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley,
California. It conducts unclassified scientific research and is
managed by the University of California.
Source:
Berkeley Lab

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