Polymerase chain reaction of 2-kb cyanobacterial gene and human anti- alpha sub(1)-chymotrypsin gene from genomic DNA on the In-Check single-use microfabricated silicon chip

The microfabricated chip is a promising format for automating and miniaturizing the multiple steps of genotyping. We tested an innovative silicon biochip (In-Check Lab-on-Chip; STMicroelectronics, Agrate Brianza, Italy) designed for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of complex biological samp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical biochemistry 2006-06, Vol.353 (2), p.191-197
Hauptverfasser: Consolandi, Clarissa, Severgnini, Marco, Frosini, Andrea, Caramenti, Giancarlo, De Fazio, Marco, Ferrara, Francesco, Zocco, Anna, Fischetti, Alessandra, Palmieri, Michele, De Bellis, Gianluca
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The microfabricated chip is a promising format for automating and miniaturizing the multiple steps of genotyping. We tested an innovative silicon biochip (In-Check Lab-on-Chip; STMicroelectronics, Agrate Brianza, Italy) designed for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of complex biological samples. The chip is mounted on a 1 x 3-in super(2). plastic slide that provides the necessary mechanical, thermal, electrical, and fluidic connections. A temperature control system drives the chip to the desired temperatures, and a graphical user interface allows experimenters to define cycling conditions and monitor reactions in real time. During thermal cycling, we recorded a cooling rate of 3.2 degree C/s and a heating rate of 11 degree C/s. The temperature maintained at each thermal plateau was within 0.13 degree C of the programmed temperature at three sensors. From 0.5 ng/ mu l genomic DNA, the In-Check device successfully amplified the 2060-bp cyanobacterial 16S rRNA gene and the 330-bp human anti- alpha sub(1)- chymotrypsin gene. The shortest PCR protocol that produced an amplicon by capillary electrophoresis comprised 30 cycles and was 22.5 min long. These thermal cycling characteristics suggest that the In-Check device will permit future development of a genotyping lab-on-a-chip device, yielding results in a short time from a limited amount of biological starting material.
ISSN:0003-2697
DOI:10.1016/j.ab.2006.03.019