TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The present invention relates to a method for extracting beads from droplets in a
microfluidic channel and a device suitable for carrying out the method. This method
is applicable for performing a single-cell multiomics analysis.
TECHNICAL BACKGROUND
[0002] Recent advances in single-cell sequencing and droplet microfluidics have allowed
molecular modalities to be analyzed from a large number of individual cells at a single-cell
resolution. The most common method today is based on compartmentalizing single cells
within micro-droplets forming an emulsion in a microfluidic device, in which the targeted
modality, such as transcriptome, genome, proteome or epigenome, is associated with
a unique DNA barcode before being subjected to sequencing.
[0003] For example,
Klein AM, et al., Cell. 2015;161(5):1187-1201 (2015) proposes a droplet-microfluidic approach for indexing RNA molecules of individual
cells with unique DNA barcodes in droplets, followed by next-generation sequencing.
DNA barcodes are brought in droplets by polymer beads that are coencapsulated with
cells. The teaching of this document is limited to the analysis of a single cellular
modality, e.g., RNA.
[0004] Over the last years, there has been an increasing interest in establishing links
between different cellular modalities at a single-cell resolution. Several methods
for such single-cell multiomics sequencing protocols have been reviewed in, for example,
Macaulay IC, et.al., Nat Methods. 2015;12(6):519-22,
Matuta, K., Rivello, F., Huck, W. T. S., Adv. Biosys. 4, 1900188 (2020), and
Lee, J., Hyeon, D.Y. & Hwang, D. Exp Mol Med 52, 1428-1442 (2020), such as the G&T-seq method for quantifying the genome and transcriptome, the SNARE-seq
method for quantifying the transcriptome and epigenome, and the CITE-seq method for
quantifying the transcriptome and proteome.
[0005] G&T-seq involves bead-based separation of RNA and DNA, in which the beads on which
RNA is captured can be extracted from a supernatant containing DNA. In other words,
it requires a physical separation step of the RNA and DNA and it is difficult to be
adapted to a droplet microfluidics platform. In SNARE-seq and CITE-seq, which are
based on microfluidics-based analysis, barcodes can be released from beads in droplets,
and the multiple analytes are treated simultaneously. This approach often lacks versatility
as the biochemical reactions and buffers need to be compatible with all the analytes.
To improve this aspect, it can be necessary to add a step of physically separating
the different cellular modalities or a step of splitting the product including the
different cellular modalities into two fractions to treat them separately.
[0006] None of the above-mentioned methods discloses extracting the beads from the droplets
in a microfluidics platform while keeping the emulsion integrity. Thus, there is a
need for an upgraded approach to extract a bead from a droplet while keeping the emulsion
integrity.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0007] It is a first object of the invention to provide a method of extracting a bead from
a droplet, comprising the steps of:
- providing a droplet of a first fluid within a second fluid, the first fluid being
immiscible with the second fluid, the droplet containing a bead;
- passing the droplet through a constriction in a main channel and supplying a third
fluid immiscible with the first fluid in a downstream channel downstream of the constriction
so as to extract the bead from the droplet.
[0008] In some embodiments, the third fluid is supplied to the downstream channel
via two side channels, downstream of the constriction, which are preferably arranged
in a symmetrical way with respect to a longitudinal direction of the main channel.
[0009] In some embodiments, the method further comprises a step of positioning the bead
at the rear of the droplet before reaching the constriction, preferably by passing
the droplet through a narrowed portion of the main channel upstream of the constriction,
the narrowed portion having a transverse dimension which is equal to or smaller than
the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state.
[0010] In some embodiments, the constriction has at least one transverse dimension which
is equal to or less than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state.
[0011] In some embodiments, the constriction has a transverse dimension which is at least
10%, or at least 20%, or at least 30%, or at least 40%, or at least 50% smaller than
the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state.
[0012] In some embodiments, the constriction has a transverse dimension which is at most
90%, or at most 80%, or at most 70%, or at most 65% smaller than the diameter of the
bead in a non-constricted state.
[0013] In some embodiments, the narrowed portion has a transverse dimension which is up
to 10 µm smaller than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state, preferably
up to 5 µm smaller than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state.
[0014] In some embodiments, the narrowed portion extends from an inlet of the main channel
to the constriction.
[0015] In some embodiments, the main channel comprises a non-narrowed portion in addition
to the narrowed portion, wherein the non-narrowed portion extends from an inlet of
the main channel to a transition area, and the narrowed portion extends from the transition
area to the constriction.
[0016] In some embodiments, all transverse dimensions of the non-narrowed portion are larger
than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state.
[0017] In some embodiments, the method further comprises a step of separately collecting
the bead from the droplet downstream of the constriction.
[0018] In some embodiments, the bead comprises a magnetic material, and the step of separately
collecting is performed using a magnetic field.
[0019] In some embodiments, the method comprises a step of encapsulating the bead in the
droplet prior to passing the droplet through the constriction.
[0020] In some embodiments, a first binding assembly and a second binding assembly are tethered
to the bead, and the droplet contains at least a first analyte which binds to the
first binding assembly and a second analyte which binds to the second binding assembly.
[0021] In some embodiments, the method further comprises, before extracting the bead from
the droplet, a step of releasing the second binding assembly from the bead in the
droplet, while the first analyte bound to the first binding assembly remains tethered
to the bead.
[0022] In some embodiments, the ratio of the flow rate of the third fluid supplied in the
downstream channel to the flow rate of the second fluid flowing through the constriction
in the main channel ranges from 1 to 30, preferably from 1 to 20, more preferably
2 to 10, still more preferably from 3 to 6and particularly preferably from 3.5 to
5.
[0023] In some embodiments, the flow rate of the second fluid flowing through the constriction
in the main channel is from 50 to 1000 µL/h and the flow rate of the third fluid supplied
in the downstream channel is from 50 to 2000 µL/h, preferably the flow rate of the
second fluid flowing through the constriction in the main channel is from 50 to 450
µL/h and the flow rate of the third fluid is from 200 to 2000 µL/h, more preferably
the flow rate of the second fluid flowing through the constriction in the main channel
is from 100 to 450 µL/h and the flow rate of the third fluid is from 500 to 1600 µL/h.
[0024] In some embodiments, the first fluid is aqueous and the second fluid and third fluid
are non-aqueous, such as fluorocarbon-based or oil-based.
[0025] In some embodiments, the third fluid supplied in the downstream channel is the same
as the second fluid.
[0026] In some embodiments, the third fluid supplied in the downstream channel is different
from the second fluid but is miscible with the second fluid.
[0027] In some embodiments, the method comprises a step of introducing a biological sample
into the droplet prior to passing the droplet through the constriction, wherein the
biological sample is preferably a single cell.
[0028] It is a second object of the invention to provide a microfluidic device for bead
extraction, comprising:
- a main channel for passing a droplet of a first fluid within a second fluid, the first
fluid being immiscible with the second fluid, the droplet comprising a bead, wherein
the main channel includes a constriction; and
- a downstream channel for flowing a third fluid immiscible with the first fluid, fluidically
connected to the main channel downstream of the constriction;
- wherein the device is configured for extracting the bead from the droplet at the constriction.
[0029] In some embodiments, the main channel of the microfluidic device comprises a narrowed
portion upstream of the constriction, wherein the narrowed portion is configured for
positioning the bead at the rear of the droplet before reaching the constriction and
has a transverse dimension which is equal to or smaller than the diameter of the bead
in a non-constricted state.
[0030] In some embodiments, the constriction of the microfluidic device has at least one
transverse dimension which is equal to or less than the diameter of the bead in a
non-constricted state.
[0031] In some embodiments, the microfluidic device may comprise two or more main channels
in parallel.
[0032] It is a third object of the invention to provide an assembly for bead extraction,
comprising:
- the above-mentioned microfluidic device; and
- a collecting reservoir equipped with a magnetic element.
[0033] The present invention makes it possible to overcome the limitations of the prior
art such as to perform bead extraction in a single-cell, droplet-based multiomics
platform. In particular, the invention provides a simple method for extracting a bead
from a droplet while keeping the emulsion integrity, thereby allowing different biological
modalities to be separated easily.
[0034] This is achieved by providing a constriction in a main channel and supplying a fluid
immiscible with the first fluid in a downstream channel, downstream of the constriction.
As a droplet passes through the constriction, it can deform easily while the bead
shows more resistance. In other words, the droplet flows faster through the constriction
while the flow of the bead slows down. The droplet is then broken by the fluid supplied
in downstream channel downstream of the constriction, thus releasing the bead from
the droplet. The bead may be then collected separately from the droplet, for example,
by using a magnetic field.
[0035] One advantage of the invention is that high-throughput extraction (approximately
100 Hz) is possible while keeping the emulsion integrity. This advantage can be coupled
with the concept of the single-cell multiomics analysis in which multimodal barcoded
beads index two or more different cellular modalities from each cell. For instance,
one cellular modality can be associated with UV-released barcodes and treated conventionally
in the droplet, while the second cellular modality is captured on the bead and extracted
out of the droplet to be treated following a different adapted protocol.
[0036] Another advantage of the invention is that this method is simple to implement as
it is already fully compatible with conventional methods such as hydrogel beads fabrication,
barcoding (split-pool) and encapsulation.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0037]
Figure 1a shows one example of a step of making beads which may be used in the invention.
Figure 1b shows beads containing a ferrofluid which may be used in the invention.
Figure 2a to Figure 2c show an example of a step of encapsulating a bead in a droplet.
Figure 3a to Figure 3c show an example of the method of extracting a bead from a droplet according to the
present invention.
Figure 4 shows an example of the main channel comprising a narrowed portion and a non-narrowed
portion.
Figure 5 is a graph showing how the extraction percentage of beads from droplets varies depending
on the flow rate of droplets and the flow rate of second fluid (oil).
Figure 6 shows an example of a collecting reservoir for collecting beads separately from droplets.
Figure 7a shows an example of the step of introducing a biological sample and a bead into a
droplet.
Figure 7b shows an example of the step of releasing a second analyte bound to a second binding
assembly from a bead into a droplet, while a first analyte bound to a first binding
assembly remains tethered to the bead.
Figure 7c shows an example of extracting a bead from a droplet, thereby separating the first
analyte on the bead from the second analyte released in the droplet.
Figure 8 shows an example of a microfluidic device having several main channels in parallel.
Figure 9 shows a schematic diagram of a probe which can be used in the present invention.
Figure 10 shows a schematic diagram of an example of the probe which can be used in the present
invention.
Figure 11a and Figure 11b schematically illustrate one application example of the invention, in which the second
analyte is subjected to amplification after the extraction.
Figure 12a to Figure 12e schematically illustrate one application example of the invention, in which the first
analyte bound on the bead is, after the extraction, subjected to reverse transcription
and amplification.
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0038] The invention will now be described in more detail without limitation in the following
description.
[0039] The term
"microfluidic" herein means a device or chip in which the minimal channel or chamber dimensions
are of the order of 1 to less than 1000 µm. The term
"millifluidic" herein means a device or chip in which the minimal channel or chamber dimensions
are of the order of 1 to 10 mm. The term
"nanofluidic" herein means a device or chip in which the minimal channel or chamber dimensions
are of the order of less than 1 µm.
[0040] The term "
channel" means an elongated space such as a tube, duct, pipe, or conduit, along which fluids
can flow. The channel is delimited by at least one inlet and at least one outlet.
Each of the inlet and outlet may correspond to a connection port or may represent
a mere junction with another channel for other upstream/downstream microfluidic operations.
[0041] Although the description below makes reference to microfluidic devices or chips,
millifluidic or nanofluidic devices or chips may be used equivalently.
Beads and method of making them
Beads
[0042] The term "beads" herein means three-dimensional particles, preferably made from natural
or synthetic polymers, having preferably a substantially spherical shape in a non-constricted
state. The term
"non-constricted state" herein refers to the shape of the beads freely suspended in a suspension at zero
or a low flow rate. In this state, the beads are not deformed by shear, by contact
with a surface, by a magnetic force or the like.
[0043] The beads may be hydrogel beads. Polyacrylamide beads are a preferred example.
[0044] In some embodiments, the beads contain a magnetic material such as magnetic fluid,
a magnetic nanoparticle or a magnetic core. Examples of the magnetic fluid is a ferrofluid.
The term
"ferrofluid' refers to a suspension comprising magnetic nanoparticles (i.e. particles having a
maximum dimension of less than 1 µm). Examples of magnetic nanoparticles include,
but are not limited to, those comprising or consisting of iron, cobalt, zinc, cadmium,
nickel, gadolinium, chromium, copper, manganese, terbium, europium, gold, silver,
platinum, and alloys thereof. Examples of the magnetic core include an iron core.
[0045] In some embodiments, the beads contain a ferrofluid, as shown in
Fig. 1b. The proportion of ferrofluid in the beads may for example range from 0.5 to 50%,
preferably from 1 to 30 %, more preferably from 2 to 20% (v/v). The proportion of
the magnetic nanoparticles in the beads may for example range from 0.01 to 1%, preferably
0.05% to 0.7%, more preferably 0.1% to 0.5% (v/v).
[0046] The beads may be magnetic such as paramagnetic or superparamagnetic, and in particular
paramagnetic.
[0047] A step of adjusting the particle size distribution of the bead population may be
provided, which may include for example straining the beads in order to remove all
beads having a diameter above a threshold value.
[0048] The diameter of each individual bead may range for example from 10 nm to 1 mm, preferably
from 100 nm to 500 µm, more preferably from 1 µm to 250 µm, even more preferably from
10 µm to 150 µm, most preferably from 25 µm to 100 µm. An example of diameter is approximately
50 µm. As a population, the beads may be characterized by a median volume diameter
Dv50 ranging for example from 10 nm to 1 mm, preferably from 100 nm to 500 µm, more
preferably from 1 µm to 250 µm, even more preferably from 10 µm to 150 µm, most preferably
from 25 µm to 100 µm. An example of median volume diameter Dv50 diameter is approximately
50 µm.
[0049] The diameter may be determined by microscope imaging, optionally with fluorescence
labeling. For example, two-dimensional images of the beads may be captured and the
average diameter or median diameter may be calculated from, for example, 100 beads,
based on such microscopy images. The maximum dimension measured on each microscopy
image corresponds to the diameter of the bead.
Making beads
[0051] The beads may in particular be formed in a microfluidic chip.
[0052] One example of a method of making beads is illustrated in
Fig. 1a.
[0053] In a microfluidic chip, a gel precursor may be passed through a main channel
1 and a fluid immiscible with the gel precursor as a continuous phase may be passed
through at least one side channel
2, thereby forming droplets of the gel precursor within the immiscible fluid. The gel
precursor may contain the magnetic material as described above.
[0054] Fig. 1a illustrates two side channels for the immiscible fluid, which are perpendicular to
the main channel (so-called
"flow-focusing" geometry), but the channel geometry is not limited to this flow-focusing geometry,
and may be a T-junction in which two incoming flows of fluid are orthogonally joined,
or a co-flow geometry in which one fluid flows in an inner channel and the other fluid
flows in an outer channel in the same direction, the outlet of the inner channel being
disposed in the outer channel.
[0055] As shown in
Fig. 1a, a cross-linking initiator may be injected from an additional channel
1' fluidically connected to the main channel
1, but alternatively the cross-linking initiator may be premixed in the gel precursor
(in this case, there may be no need for the additional channel).
[0056] The flow rates of the gel precursor, the immiscible fluid, and possibly the cross-linking
initiator may vary depending on the application, and in particular on the dimensions
of the channel. The throughput may be approximately from 100 to 6000 droplets/s.
[0057] The formed droplets may then be cross-linked to form beads dispersed in a surrounding
fluid, which is preferably an aqueous phase. If the immiscible fluid used for forming
the beads is fluorocarbon-based or oil-based, the beads may be transferred to an aqueous
phase as a surrounding fluid, or said fluid may be removed and replaced by an aqueous
phase as a surrounding fluid. This replacement may take place before, or preferably
after cross-linking. The conditions for cross-linking may be selected depending on
the composition of the precursor gel and may include for example heating or electromagnetic
irradiation such as UV irradiation, or chemical crosslinking such as the addition
of calcium in the case of alginate cross-linking.
[0058] The beads may be conditioned in a packed configuration, for example owing to a centrifugation
or magnetic sedimentation step.
Encapsulating a bead in a droplet
[0059] The beads may be encapsulated in droplets according to any known method in the art,
for example, as described in the abovementioned article by
Zilionis R et al. and in Abate et al. Lab on a Chip. 2009;9(18):2628-2631, using a commercially available machine, such as 10X Genomics Chromium and a microfluidic
chip known from, for example, the abovementioned article by Klein et al.
[0060] Preferably, each droplet contains at most one single bead.
[0061] Specifically, a first fluid comprising beads may be passed through a main channel,
and a second fluid immiscible with the first fluid may be passed through at least
one side channel in a microfluidic chip. Then, droplets of the first fluid within
the second fluid are formed. This may be also referred to as an emulsion of droplets
of the first fluid in the second fluid.
[0062] In some embodiments, the volume of the formed droplets may range from 0.05 nL to
3 nL, preferably from 0.1 nL to 1 nL. The volume of the formed droplets may be, for
example, 0.8 nL.
[0063] The term
"emulsion" as used herein refers to a mixture of two or more fluids that are normally immiscible.
In an emulsion, one fluid (dispersed phase) is dispersed in another fluid (continuous
phase). The emulsion used in the present invention may be directed to
"water-in-oif' emulsions, in which an aqueous fluid (e.g., droplets of the first fluid) is dispersed
in an oil-based or fluorocarbon-based fluid (e.g., second fluid). The phrase
"keeping the emulsion integrity" means that the aqueous fluid remains dispersed in the oil-based or fluorocarbon-based
fluid without destruction of the emulsion, i.e., without any merging of droplets or
any breaking of droplets in several parts.
[0064] In some embodiments, the first fluid is aqueous and the second fluid is non-aqueous,
such as fluorocarbon-based or oil-based. The second fluid preferably comprises a fluorinated
oil, such as a fluoroether. It may also comprise an emulsion stabilizer and/or a surfactant.
When it is simply referred to as "
oil", the oil may refer to a fluorocarbon-based fluid or an oil-based fluid.
[0065] Fig. 2a to
Fig. 2c show an example of a step of encapsulating a bead in a droplet, at three successive
time points.
[0066] As shown in
Fig. 2a, the first fluid is passed through a main channel
1. Beads
3 are fed to the main channel
1 via an upstream side channel. The beads
3 within the first side channel may be contained in a fluid which can be the first
fluid, or at least is miscible with the first fluid. In particular, both the first
fluid and the fluid in the first side channel may be aqueous. A second fluid immiscible
with the first fluid (preferably fluorocarbon-based or oil-based) may be passed through
at least one downstream side channel
2, e.g., two downstream side channels
2 on either side of the main channel.
[0067] Fig. 2b corresponds to the end of the encapsulation shown in
Fig. 2a, where the bead
3 and some first fluid are about to be encapsulated to form a droplet.
Fig. 2c corresponds to the beginning of the next encapsulation, where the droplet
4, which is formed in
Fig. 2a and
Fig. 2b and which contains the bead
3, flows further downstream while a new droplet
4' is being formed.
[0068] Fig. 2a to
Fig. 2c illustrate two side channels for the second fluid, but the channel geometry is not
limited to this flow-focusing geometry, and may be a T-junction or a co-flow geometry,
as described above in connection with the step of making the beads.
[0069] In this example, the beads 3 may be packed in the first fluid or in the fluid at
least miscible with the first fluid. This may be achieved by centrifugation, for example.
One advantage of packed beads is that the beads can be encapsulated into the droplets
in a deterministic way because the bead release can be easily synchronized with the
droplet generation by tuning the flow rates. This way, the Poisson distribution resulting
from random loading techniques can be avoided, as described more in detail in the
above-mentioned article by Abate et al.
[0070] The first fluid may further comprise a buffer for avoiding sedimentation in tubes
and syringes, and the like.
[0071] The flow rates of the first fluid, the beads in the first fluid or in the fluid miscible
with the first fluid, and the second fluid may vary depending on the application,
and in particular on the dimensions of the main channel. The throughput may be generally
between 70 and 200 Hz, depending on the flow rates and droplet composition.
Collecting bead-containing droplets
[0072] The droplets of the first fluid within the second fluid thus obtained may be collected
in a reservoir, such as a test tube, equipped with a plug and inlet and outlet conduits
connected to the test tube through the plug. The plug may be a polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS) plug.
[0073] The configuration of such a reservoir may be similar to that shown in
Fig. 6, which will be explained later in detail.
[0074] The emulsion (droplets of the first fluid within the second fluid) may arrive in
the test tube via the inlet conduit, and the droplets may remain packed near the surface
as they are generally lighter than the second fluid. The reservoir of this emulsion
of droplets of the first fluid in the second fluid may be transported, subjected to
different operations such as heat incubation or UV exposure, and reinjected to another
microfluidic chip for any additional treatment, such as the subsequent extraction
of the beads from the droplets. For this purpose, a syringe filled by a second fluid,
e.g., oil, may be plugged to the outlet conduit and mounted on a syringe pump or a
pressure controller. The droplets may be flowed backwards in a packed way out of the
inlet conduit to a microfluidic chip for bead extraction, for example.
Extracting beads from droplets using a microfluidic device
Extraction of beads from droplets
[0075] The extraction of a bead from a droplet may be performed in a microfluidic device
which comprises in particular a main channel.
[0076] The device and in particular the main channel of the device may be prepared for instance
by microlithography, soft lithography, hot embossing, microcontact printing, direct
laser writing, additive or subtractive 3D printing, micromachining, removing sacrificial
wires or materials, injection molding or extrusion.
[0077] In other possible embodiments, the main channel and any additional (e.g. side) channel
may be tubes which are assembled together.
[0078] Typical but non-exhaustive examples of materials which may be used to make the device
and in particular the channels of the device include elastomers, thermoplastics, resins,
glass, fused silica, silicone or combinations thereof. Elastomers can be, for instance
and in a non-limiting manner, silicones such as polydimethylsiloxane, polyurethanes,
acrylic elastomers, fluoroelastomers, polyenes, materials marketed under the brand
Tygon
® and combinations thereof. Thermoplastic polymers can be, for instance and in a non-limiting
manner, polyolefins, such as polyethylene, polypropylene, and more generally polyenes
and their copolymers, low or high density, crosslinked or not, cyclic olefin polymers,
cyclic olefin copolymers, acrylates such as polymethylmethacrylates, polycarbonates,
polyesters, fluorinated polymers, polyamides and combinations thereof. Resins may
notably be epoxy, polyester and/or polyurethane resins.
[0079] The method of the invention comprises providing a bead-containing droplet of a first
fluid within a second fluid (as defined above), passing the droplet through a constriction
in a main channel, and supplying a third fluid immiscible with the first fluid in
a downstream channel, downstream of the constriction so as to extract the bead from
the droplet.
[0080] The method of the invention may comprise a step of making beads and/or a step of
encapsulating a bead in a droplet (as described above), as preliminary steps.
[0081] Alternatively, the method of the invention may not comprise these preliminary steps.
In this case, a feedstock of beads or of bead-containing droplets may be used.
[0082] In some embodiments, the first fluid is aqueous and the second fluid is fluorocarbon-based
or oil-based, as described above.
[0083] In some embodiments, the third fluid supplied in a downstream channel downstream
of the constriction is the same as the second fluid.
[0084] Alternatively, the third fluid supplied in a downstream channel downstream of the
constriction may be different from the second fluid and miscible with the second fluid.
[0085] For the sake of simplicity, it will be considered below that the second fluid is
supplied in the downstream channel, but the description applies similarly if a third
fluid different from the second fluid is supplied in the downstream channel.
[0086] In some embodiments, the second fluid is supplied in a downstream channel comprising
two side channels, downstream of the constriction, which are arranged in a symmetrical
way with respect to a longitudinal direction of the main channel.
[0087] The term
"longitudinal direction" herein refers to the direction of passing the droplet (i.e., direction of the droplet
flow) in the constriction of the main channel. The term
"transverse dimension" refers to a direction perpendicular to the longitudinal direction. When the main
channel extends along a length of the microfluidic device, the width direction and
the thickness direction are transverse directions.
[0088] The method of extracting a bead from a droplet and the microfluidic device suitable
for implementing the method are explained below by reference to
Fig. 3a to
Fig. 3c, in which XYZ axes are shown; the X axis corresponds to the width direction, the
Y axis to the longitudinal direction, and the Z axis perpendicular to the plane of
Fig. 3a-3c to the thickness direction.
[0089] As shown in
Fig. 3a, the microfluidic device comprises a main channel
1 which comprises a constriction
5; and a downstream channel
2' fluidically connected to the main channel
1, downstream of the constriction
5.
[0090] By
"constriction" is meant an area of the main channel which has a transverse dimension smaller than
the transverse dimension of the main channel in an area immediately upstream of the
constriction (in other terms, a reduced transverse dimension).
[0091] Preferably, the outlet of the main channel is positioned in the constriction, at
the junction with the downstream channel.
[0092] The downstream channel may be aligned, i.e. in the same orientation as the main channel,
as shown in
Fig. 3a (i.e., the direction of flow in the downstream channel may be the same as the direction
of flow in the main channel). Alternatively, the downstream channel can have a different
orientation from the main channel, such as a perpendicular orientation.
[0093] The downstream channel
2' may further comprise at least one side channel, preferably two side channels. In
Fig. 3a, for example, the downstream channel
2' further comprises two side channels
2 which are connected to the main channel at an acute angle (with respect to the portion
of the main channel upstream of the junction). In this example, the second fluid may
be supplied via the two side channels, and the flow direction of the second fluid
may be aligned with the flow direction of the main channel
1 (from top to down in
Fig. 3a). Alternatively, the two side channels
2 may be arranged in a flow-focusing geometry (arranged perpendicularly to the main
channel) or a co-flow geometry.
[0094] In reference to
Fig. 3a, the droplet
4 flows along the main channel
1 and passes through the constriction
5, and second fluid is supplied in the downstream channel via two side channels
2 downstream of the constriction.
[0095] As the droplet
4 passes through the constriction, the droplet
4 may deform easily while the bead
3 may show more resistance. As a result, the droplet
4 may flow through the constriction faster than the bead
3 (
Fig. 3b). The droplet
4 may be then broken by the shearing force exerted by the second fluid supplied in
the downstream channel (supplied via the at least one side channel, if present) downstream
of the constriction, releasing the bead
3 from the droplet
4 (
Fig. 3c). Thus, the bead can be extracted from the droplet while keeping the emulsion integrity.
[0096] After the extraction, the bead may be surrounded by a small amount of the first fluid,
and therefore may be provided in a reduced droplet of first fluid within the flow
of second fluid. The volume of first fluid in this reduced droplet may be less than
10%, preferably less than 5%, or less than 2%, or less than 1%, or less than 0.5%,
or less than 0.1%, relative to the volume of first fluid in the (initial) droplet
before extraction.
[0097] In some embodiments, the constriction has a transverse dimension which is equal to
or less than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state (or the Dv50 of the
beads in a non-constricted state). Preferably, the constriction has a transverse dimension
which is at least 10% smaller than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state
(or the Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted state). The transverse dimension of
the constriction (as measured at the longitudinal position wherein the transverse
dimension is minimal) may be for example from 10 to 90%, or from 20 to 80%, or from
30 to 75%, or from 40 to 70%, or from 50 to 65% smaller than the diameter of the bead
in a non-constricted state (or the Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted state).
[0098] As shown in
Fig. 3a-3c, the constriction may have a tapered shape, wherein the transverse dimension gradually
decreases from upstream to downstream (towards the junction with the downstream channel).
The transverse dimension may be minimal at the junction with the downstream channel.
Alternatively, other shapes are possible. For example, the constriction may have a
stepped portion, wherein the transverse dimension is reduced in one or more discrete
increments from upstream to downstream.
[0099] Only one transverse dimension may be reduced in the constriction. For instance, as
shown in
Fig. 3a-3c, the width of the channel is reduced along the constriction, while the thickness of
the channel may remain constant. The opposite is also possible, i.e. the thickness
of the channel is reduced along the constriction, while the width of the channel may
remain constant. Alternatively, two transverse dimensions may be reduced, e.g. both
the thickness and the width of the channel are reduced along the constriction.
[0100] Immediately downstream of the constriction, the transverse dimension of the downstream
channel (in which the supplied second fluid, the extracted bead and the remaining
droplet continue to flow) is larger than the transverse dimension of the constriction.
Preferably, the transverse dimension of the downstream channel immediately downstream
of the constriction is equal to or, as illustrated in
Fig. 3a-3c, larger than the transverse dimension of the main channel upstream of the constriction.
[0101] As shown in
Fig. 3a-3c, when the downstream channel comprises a side channel, each side channel
2 may be connected to the downstream channel at an acute angle (with respect to the
main channel upstream of the junction), which may be between 10 and 85°, preferably
between 20 and 75°, more preferably between 30 and 60°, such as between 40 and 50°.
Alternatively, each side channel
2 may be connected perpendicularly to the downstream channel. Alternatively, each side
channel
2 may be connected to the downstream channel at an obtuse angle (with respect to the
portion of the main channel upstream of the junction), which may be between 100 and
175°, preferably between 110 and 165°, more preferably between 120 and 150°, such
as between 130 and 140°.
Plurality of main channels
[0102] Although the method of the invention is mostly described above by making reference
to one main channel, the microfluidic device of the invention advantageously comprises
two or more main channels in parallel.
[0103] Each main channel may be independently connected to a different downstream channel.
In this case, each downstream channel may be provided with respective side channels,
as described above. Alternatively, several main channels, for example all main channels,
may be connected to the same downstream channel.
[0104] Fig. 8 shows an example of such a microfluidic device, in which XYZ axes are shown; the
X axis corresponds to the width direction, the Y axis to the longitudinal direction,
and the Z axis perpendicular to the plane of
Fig. 8 to the thickness direction.
[0105] As shown in
Fig. 8, the microfluidic device comprises eight main channels
1 each of which comprises a constriction
5, and a single common downstream channel
2' downstream of the constrictions. Preferably all the main channels have inlets connected
to the same source of fluid.
[0106] The second fluid flows within the downstream channel in one direction from left to
right of
Fig. 8.
[0107] The dimension of each main channel/constriction may be as discussed above. The dimension
of each main channel/constriction may be different or preferably the same in the microfluidic
device.
[0108] The microfluidic device having two or more main channels makes it possible to parallelize
the above-described extraction process, increasing the extraction efficiency. Moreover,
even if some of the main channels are blocked or clogged, e.g., at the constrictions,
other channels are not affected and keep extracting the beads from the droplets.
[0109] As shown in
Fig. 8, the common downstream channel
2' may be oriented perpendicularly to the main channels. It may have, on the side connecting
to the main channels, one or more portions which protrude in the longitudinal (Y)
direction (hereinafter referred to as "protruded portions"). The protruded portions
may be located on either side of each main channel.
[0110] The protruded portions may also protrude in the thickness (Z) direction. Alternatively,
the downstream channel may be a straight channel, without containing any protruded
portion.
[0111] The downstream channel may have a thickness (Z) equal to or preferably larger than
the thickness of the main channel (including upstream of the constriction).This may
assist in droplet breakup.
[0112] For the sake of simplicity, the method of the invention will be described below mostly
by referring to one main channel, but the description applies similarly if the microfluidic
device comprises several main channels.
Positioning of beads
[0113] The method of the invention may further comprise a step of positioning the bead at
the rear of the droplet before the droplet reaches the constriction. The rear end
of the droplet is the upstream end of the droplet relative to the direction of flow.
By
"positioning the bead at the rear of the droplet" is meant that the bead is displaced within the droplet from any position in the
droplet to a position which is at the rear end of the droplet along the longitudinal
direction (i.e., upstream end along the direction of the droplet flow), and which
is preferably substantially centered along the transverse directions.
[0114] The positioning step facilitates and improves the quality of the later extraction
of the bead from the droplet.
[0115] This positioning step is preferably carried out by passing the droplet through a
narrowed portion of the main channel upstream of the constriction, which has a transverse
dimension equal to or smaller than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state
(or the Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted state).
[0116] The narrowed portion may have a transverse dimension which is for example from 0
to 30%, or from 1 to 20%, or from 2 to 15%, or from 5 to 10% smaller than the diameter
of the bead in a non-constricted state (or the Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted
state). The narrowed portion may have a transverse dimension which is from 0 to 20
µm smaller, or from 1 to 15 µm, or from 2 to 10 µm or from 3 to 8 µm smaller than
the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state (or the Dv50 of the beads in a
non-constricted state).
[0117] Owing to the narrowed portion, the beads may be slightly compressed in the transverse
direction upstream of the constriction, so that a friction force directs the bead
to the rear of the droplet and maintains it in this position before the bead is extracted
from the droplet.
[0118] The narrowed portion may extend from an inlet of the main channel (by which the droplets
are supplied) down to (and possibly including) the constriction.
[0119] Alternatively, the main channel may comprise a non-narrowed portion in addition to
the narrowed portion, wherein the non-narrowed portion may extend from an inlet of
the main channel (by which the droplets are supplied) to a transition area, and the
narrowed portion may extend from the transition area down to (and possibly including)
the constriction.
[0120] The non-narrowed portion has at least one transverse dimension which is larger than
the narrowed portion. In some embodiments, all transverse dimensions of the non-narrowed
portion are larger than the diameter of the bead in a non-constricted state (or the
Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted state).
[0121] The transverse dimension of the narrowed portion equal to or smaller than the diameter
of the bead in a non-constricted state (or the Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted
state) may be in particular the width direction or the thickness direction. In some
embodiments, both the width dimension and the thickness dimension are equal to or
smaller than the diameter of the bead (or the Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted
state) in a non-constricted state as described above.
[0122] When a non-narrowed portion and a narrowed portion are present, the transition between
both portions may be a step or a series of steps (along the width and/or thickness).
Alternatively, the main channel may be tapered, the width and/or thickness decreasing
gradually in the transition area.
[0123] The narrowed portion may extend down to and encompass the constriction.
[0124] The transverse dimension in the narrowed portion which is equal to or smaller than
the diameter or Dv50 as defined above may be in the same direction as the reduced
transverse dimension in the constriction (in which case the transverse dimension in
the constriction is even smaller than the transverse dimension in the narrowed portion
upstream of the constriction), or it may be in a different direction.
[0125] For example, the transverse dimension in the narrowed portion which is equal to or
smaller than the diameter or Dv50 as defined above may be the width, while the reduced
transverse dimension in the constriction may be the thickness.
[0126] Alternatively, the transverse dimension in the narrowed portion which is equal to
or smaller than the diameter or Dv50 as defined above may be the thickness, while
the reduced transverse dimension in the constriction may be the width.
[0127] Alternatively, the transverse dimension in the narrowed portion which is equal to
or smaller than the diameter or Dv50 as defined above may be the thickness, while
the reduced transverse dimension in the constriction may be the thickness.
[0128] Alternatively, the transverse dimension in the narrowed portion which is equal to
or smaller than the diameter or Dv50 as defined above may be the width, while the
reduced transverse dimension in the constriction may be the width.
[0129] Alternatively, the transverse dimensions in the narrowed portion which are equal
to or smaller than the diameter or Dv50 as defined above may be the width and thickness,
while the reduced transverse dimension in the constriction may be the width only,
or the thickness only, or both the width and the thickness.
[0130] Alternatively, the transverse dimension(s) in the narrowed portion which is(are)
equal to or smaller than the diameter or Dv50 as defined above may be the width only,
or the thickness only, or both the width and the thickness, while the reduced transverse
dimensions in the constriction may be both the width and the thickness.
[0131] Fig. 4 shows an example of the main channel comprising a narrowed portion
6 and a non-narrowed portion
7 upstream of the narrowed portion
6, and a transition area
8 between the narrowed and non-narrowed portions. In
Fig. 4, the narrowed portion
6 has a dimension in the thickness direction which is smaller than the diameter of
the bead in a non-constricted state (or the Dv50 of the beads in a non-constricted
state), and thus the transition area
8 forms a stepped portion in the thickness direction. This way, the bead upstream of
the transition area
8 (bead in the non-narrowed portion
7) is not compressed while the bead downstream of the transition area
8 (in the narrowed portion
6) may be slightly compressed in the thickness direction. Thus, the bead may be positioned
at the rear of the droplet and then kept at the rear of the droplet due to the friction
force until the droplet reaches the constriction (constriction not shown in
Fig. 4).
[0132] In some embodiments, the main channel may have a width immediately upstream of the
constriction from 10 to 500 µm, preferably from 20 to 200 µm, more preferably from
50 to 150 µm, even more preferably from 70 to 120 µm.
[0133] In some embodiments, the main channel may have a thickness immediately upstream of
the constriction from 5 to 300 µm, preferably from 10 to 150 µm, more preferably from
20 to 100 µm, even more preferably from 30 to 80 µm.
[0134] In some embodiments, the thickness of the main channel immediately upstream of the
constriction is less than the width of the main channel immediately upstream of the
constriction.
[0135] In some embodiments, the constriction has a minimum thickness from 5 to 300 µm, preferably
from 10 to 150 µm, more preferably from 20 to 100 µm, even more preferably from 30
to 80 µm.
[0136] Alternatively, the constriction may have a minimum thickness from 1 to 100 µm, preferably
from 5 to 80 µm, more preferably from 10 to 50 µm, even more preferably from 15 to
40 µm.In some embodiments, the constriction has a minimum width from 1 to 100 µm,
preferably from 5 to 80 µm, more preferably from 10 to 50 µm, even more preferably
from 15 to 40 µm.
[0137] Alternatively, the constriction may have a minimum width from 5 to 300 µm, preferably
from 10 to 150 µm, more preferably from 20 to 100 µm, even more preferably from 30
to 80 µm.ln some embodiments, the (minimum) width of the constriction is less than
the (minimum) thickness of the constriction.
[0138] Alternatively, the (minimum) thickness of the constriction is less than the (minimum)
width of the constriction.
[0139] Alternatively, the positioning of the bead at the rear of the droplet may be achieved
differently, such as by applying a magnetic field having a suitable magnitude and
orientation to the main channel upstream of the constriction.
Plurality of droplets
[0140] Although the method of the invention is mostly described herein by making reference
to one bead-containing droplet, it advantageously comprises providing a plurality
of droplets (as described above) and successively passing the droplets through the
constriction so as to the extract the beads from their respective droplets.
[0141] The method may thus be continuous and involve the processing of a stream of droplets.
The entirety of the present description must be interpreted in this context.
Adjustment of flow rates
[0142] The flow rate of the droplets and the flow rate of the second fluid supplied in the
downstream channel may vary depending on the application, and in particular on the
dimensions of the channel. They may be selected so that most of the beads (e.g., all
the beads) are extracted from the droplets, and so that a low volume of first fluid
remains around the extracted beads.
[0143] The term
"flow rate of the droplet(s)" herein means the flow rate of the second fluid (e.g., oil) carrying the droplets.
[0144] Fig. 5 is a table obtained from experimental data showing how the extraction percentage
of beads from droplets varies depending on the flow rate of droplets upstream of the
constriction and the flow of the second fluid (oil) supplied in the downstream channel
downstream of the constriction (e.g. via one or more side channels), using beads having
a volume median diameter (in the non-constricted state) of 47 µm and the arrangement
shown in
Fig. 3a-3c. Qdrops represents the flow rate of the droplets and Qoil represents the total flow
rate of oil (second fluid) supplied in the downstream channel via the side channels.
The extraction percentage is measured using a fast camera, which will be explained
in detail in the Examples.
[0145] The numbers in the table of
Fig. 5 correspond to the proportion of beads which are extracted from the droplets. Ideally,
the extraction rate should be 100% or close to 100% (such as from 95 to 100%, or from
98 to 100%, or from 99 to 100%). The color in the table relates to the amount of first
fluid remaining around the beads after extraction. When the cells are colored in white,
the amount of first fluid remaining around the beads is higher than when the cells
are colored in gray. This higher amount of the remaining first fluid is due to the
droplets breaking prematurely because of high shearing due to the supply of second
fluid via the side channels. This may result in reduced purity of the extraction process.
[0146] The flow rates of the droplets and the flow rate of the second fluid may thus be
selected so that a satisfactory extraction rate is achieved with little retention
of first fluid around the beads.
[0147] Specifically, the ratio of the flow rate of the second fluid (supplied in the downstream
channel) to the flow rate of the droplets flowing through the main channel (upstream
of the constriction) may range from 1 to 30, preferably from 1 to 20, more preferably
2 to 10, still more preferably from 3 to 6, particularly preferably from 3.5 to 5.
[0148] The flow rate of the droplets flowing through the main channel (upstream of the constriction)
may range from 50 to 1000 µL/h and the flow rate of the second fluid supplied in the
downstream channel may be from 50 to 2000 µL/h, preferably the flow rate of the droplets
flowing through the main channel (upstream of the constriction) is from 50 to 450
µL/h and the flow rate of the second fluid supplied in the downstream channel is from
200 to 2000 µL/h, more preferably the flow rate of the droplets flowing through the
constriction in the main channel is from 100 to 450 µL/h and the flow rate of the
second fluid supplied in the downstream channel is from 500 to 1600 µL/h.
[0149] The flow rate of fluid entering the downstream channel from the main channel through
the constriction is not taken into account in the flow rate of the second fluid supplied
in the downstream channel, in the above.
Collecting beads and droplets
[0150] After the beads are extracted, the method of the invention may further comprise a
step of separately collecting the bead from the droplet downstream of the constriction.
[0151] In some embodiments, the bead comprises a magnetic material, and the step of separately
collecting the bead is performed using a magnetic field.
[0152] As shown in
Fig. 6, for example, the droplets
4 and extracted beads
3 may be collected (from an outlet of the downstream channel) in a collecting reservoir
9.
[0153] The collecting reservoir
9 may be a test tube for example, which may have a volume ranging from 100 µL to 100
mL, in particular from 500 µL to 50 mL, such as from 1 to 5 mL. The collecting reservoir
9 may be equipped with a plug
11 and inlet conduit
12 and outlet conduit
13 inserted into the collecting reservoir
9 through the plug
11. The plug may be a PDMS plug. The collecting reservoir
9 may be also equipped or associated with a magnetic element
10, such as a magnet. The magnetic element
10 may optionally be fixed to the collecting reservoir
9.
[0154] Preferably, both the inlet conduit
12 and outlet conduit
13 may have an open end within the collecting reservoir
9. The inlet conduit
12 may extend deeper in the collecting reservoir
9 than the outlet conduit
13, so that the open end of the inlet conduit
12 is below the open end of the outlet conduit
13 as shown in the figure. The stream containing the droplets and extracted beads may
be introduced into the collecting reservoir
9 via the inlet conduit
12.
[0155] The extracted beads
3 may be collected using a magnetic element
10 to the collecting reservoir
9 while the droplets
4 may gather at or near the surface of the second fluid, as the first fluid is generally
less dense than the second fluid.
[0156] Optionally, the droplets may be withdrawn from the collecting reservoir
9 via the outlet conduit
13 (for example using a syringe or a peristaltic pump or the like), while the beads
remain in the collecting reservoir
9 owing to the magnetic element
10.
[0157] The emulsion of droplets may be further transported to another reservoir, such as
another test tube. The beads
3 and droplets
4, thus collected separately, may be then subjected to different downstream analyses.
Separating different analytes of a biological sample
[0158] The method of extracting a bead from a droplet may be advantageously applied to perform
a biological multiomics analysis, for example a single-cell multiomics analysis, by
allowing different analytes of a biological sample to be separated easily.
Biological sample
[0159] The term
"biological sample" means any sample obtained from a biological source. Examples thereof include whole
blood, serum, plasma, saliva, urine, sputum, lymph, a cell, an organelle, an organoid,
cellular assembly, an aggregate of cells, an island of cells, an embryo, a dendrimer,
a tissue slice, a unicellular or multicellular organism, a virus, or any combination
of these. Preferably, the biological sample is a single cell or a lysed single cell,
or a fraction extracted from a single cell (such as a nucleus from a single cell).
[0160] The cells may include, as an exemplary and non-exhaustive list, eukaryotic cells,
including animal cells (such as mammal cells and more specifically human cells), yeast
cells, fungal cells, plant cells, protozoa, prokaryotic cells, such as bacteria. Any
combination of the above may also be used. The cells may be of any cell type, including
circulating tumor cells, hematopoietic cells, red blood cells, circulating endothelial
cells, parasites, circulating fetal cells and the like.
[0161] A biological sample may also be obtained from a multicellular organism, which may
include animals, notably but not exclusively, laboratory model animals such as nematodes,
embryos, notably non-human embryos (such as fish embryos), flies, eggs, plants, fungi,
genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
Introducing a biological sample
[0162] In some embodiments, the first fluid may comprise a biological sample.
[0163] In some embodiments, the method of the invention comprises a step of introducing
a biological sample into the droplet.
[0164] Alternatively, the method of the invention may not comprise any step of introducing
a biological sample. In this case, a feedstock of droplets containing a biological
sample and a bead may be used.
[0165] The step of introducing a biological sample into the droplet may be carried out simultaneously
with the step of encapsulating the bead in the droplet as described above.
[0166] Fig. 7a shows an example of the step of introducing a biological sample and a bead into a
droplet.
[0167] As shown in
Fig. 7a, a flow of a first fluid may be passed through a main channel
1. Biological samples (e.g., nuclei, cells and the like)
14 may be fed to the main channel
1 via a first side channel, and beads
3 are fed to the main channel
1 via a second side channel. The beads
3 may be packed in a fluid so that the bead release can be easily synchronized with
the droplet generation by tuning the flow rates. The configuration in
Fig. 7a is thus similar to the configuration in
Fig. 2a-2c, except that an additional side channel is provided in order to supply biological
samples.
[0168] The biological samples
14 and beads
3 within the first and second side channels may be contained in a fluid which can be
the first fluid, or at least is miscible with the first fluid flowing through the
main channel. The fluid containing the beads
3 and the fluid containing the biological sample
14 may be the same or different. In particular, both the first fluid and the fluid in
the first and second side channels may be aqueous.
[0169] A second fluid immiscible with the first fluid (preferably fluorocarbon-based or
oil-based) may be passed through at least one side channel
2, e.g., two side channels on either side of the main channel.
[0170] The first fluid passed through the main channel
1 may further comprise a buffer as necessary. The buffer may be for example a lysis
buffer, a PCR buffer, a buffer for avoiding sedimentation in tubes and syringes, etc.,
and may be selected suitably depending on the application. When the first fluid further
comprises a lysis buffer, the lysis buffer may be introduced through a channel different
from the channel for introducing biological samples 14 to avoid the lysis of the biological
samples before encapsulation.
[0171] Fig. 7a illustrates two side channels for the second fluid, but the channel geometry is not
limited to this geometry, and may be a T-junction or a co-flow geometry.
[0172] The biological samples may be encapsulated in the droplets, following for example
a Poisson distribution, by adjusting the flow rate of biological samples relative
to the flow rate of the first fluid in the main channel and the concentration (or
dilution) of the biological samples within their fluid.
[0173] Preferably, these conditions are selected so that most of the formed droplets (such
as at least 80%, or at least 90% or at least 95%) do not contain a biological sample.
For example, approximately 10% of the formed droplets contain a biological sample.
Preferably, the proportion of formed droplets containing more than one biological
sample is less than 5%, preferably less than 1%, more preferably less than 0.5% or
less than 0.1%.
[0174] On the other hand, as mentioned above, substantially all droplets may contain a bead.
[0175] Fig. 7a illustrates feeding separately the biological samples
14 and packed beads
3, but alternatively the biological samples and beads may be supplied together (for
example via a single side channel).
Binding assemblies for first and second analytes
[0176] In the method of the invention, a first binding assembly and a second binding assembly
may be tethered to the bead, and the droplet may contain at least a first analyte
which binds to the first binding assembly and a second analyte (different from the
first analyte) which binds to the second binding assembly. More than two binding assemblies
may be present and bind to respective analytes.
[0177] The first analyte and second analyte may be contained in the biological sample added
to the droplet.
[0178] The term
"analyte" as used herein (also referred to as
"cellular modality") refers to a variety of biological and chemical molecules including, but not limited
to, nucleic acids, polypeptides, amino acids, polysaccharides and lipids. Specific
examples thereof include DNA such as genomic and mitochondrial DNA, RNA such as mRNA
and microRNA, modified or artificial nucleic acids such as block nucleic acids, peptide
nucleic acids, thiolated nucleic acids, epigenetic information such as chromatin and
DNA methylation, cell surface, intracellular, or extracellular proteins, lipid messengers
involved in cell signaling, steroid hormones, sphingolipids, prostaglandins, phosphatidylserine
lipids, oxysterol and cholesterol derivatives.
[0179] The term
"binding assembly" as used herein refers to a supramolecular assembly, which is attached to the bead
and capable of binding to an analyte. The term
"supramolecular assembly" used herein refers to a structure comprising several bound molecules.
[0180] The first binding assembly may comprise a first bead-binding portion and a first
probe portion, and the second binding assembly may comprise a second bead-binding
portion, a second probe portion and a cleavable portion between the second bead-binding
portion and the second probe portion.
[0181] Below, the term "probe" may be used as an assembly comprising a bead, a first binding
assembly and a second binding assembly.
[0182] Fig. 9 schematically shows an example of the probe
15. The first binding assembly
17 and the second binding assembly
18 may be attached to the bead
16 via the first bead-binding portion
17a and the second bead-binding portion
18a, respectively.
[0183] In some embodiments, the first binding assembly
17 and the second binding assembly
18 may be a single-stranded or double-stranded polynucleotide sequence. Alternatively,
the first binding assembly
17 and the second binding assembly
18 may be partially single-stranded and partially double-stranded polynucleotide sequence.
[0184] The term
"bead-binding portion" refers to a portion which is attached to the bead. The bead-binding portion may be
a single-stranded or double-stranded polynucleotide sequence.
[0185] The term
"polynucleotide" as used herein refers to a nucleic acid sequence. The nucleic acid sequence may be
a DNA or a RNA sequence, preferably the nucleic acid sequence is a DNA sequence. This
term also encompasses what is sometimes referred to as oligonucleotides. The polynucleotide
sequences used in the present invention may be designed and purchased commercially
from any DNA synthesis facilities/companies, or synthesized by standard techniques.
[0186] The bead-binding portion may be a single-stranded sequence having a length of 5 to
100 nucleotides (nt), 5 to 90 nt, 5 to 80 nt, 5 to 70 nt, 5 to 60 nt, 5 to 50 nt,
5 to 40 nt, 5 to 30 nt, 5 to 20 nt, 10 to 100 nt, 10 to 90 nt, 10 to 80 nt, 10 to
70 nt, 10 to 60 nt, 10 to 50 nt, 10 to 40 nt, 10 to 30 nt or 10 to 20 nt, for example,
5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26,
27, 28, 29, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, or 100 nt. Alternatively, the bead-binding
portion may be a double-stranded sequence having a length of 5 to 100 base pairs (bp),
5 to 90 bp, 5 to 80 bp, 5 to 70 bp, 5 to 60 bp, 5 to 50 bp, 5 to 40 bp, 5 to 30 bp,
5 to 20 bp, 10 to 100 bp, 10 to 90 bp, 10 to 80 bp, 10 to 70 bp, 10 to 60 bp, 10 to
50 bp, 10 to 40 bp, 10 to 30 bp or 10 to 20 bp, for example, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,
12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35, 40,
45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, or 100 bp.
[0187] Preferably, the bead-binding portion is a double-stranded sequence.
[0188] The bead-binding portion may vary depending on the composition of the bead; for example,
in the case of polyacrylamide beads, the bead-binding portion may be an Acrydite-modified
nucleotide sequence or a nucleotide sequence having an acrylic phosphoroamidite moiety.
[0189] In an alternative case, the beads may comprise streptavidin on their surface, and
the binding portion may be a biotin-modified nucleotide sequence.
[0190] More generally, the bead-binding portion comprises a chemical moiety which adapted
to specifically, covalently or non-covalently, binding to a corresponding chemical
moiety on the bead surface.
[0191] The bead-binding portion may be the same or different between the first and second
binding assemblies. The bead-binding portion of the first binding assembly and the
bead-binding portion of second binding assembly are preferably the same.
[0192] Referring again to
Fig. 9, the first binding assembly
17 and the second binding assembly
18 may comprise a first probe portion
17b and a second probe portion
18b, respectively.
[0193] The term
"probe portion" refers to a portion which may bind to an analyte in a specific manner. In the present
invention, the first probe portion is a portion capable of (specifically) binding
to a first analyte and the second probe portion is a portion capable of (specifically)
binding to a second analyte.
[0194] For example, the binding between the probe portion and the analyte may occur through
the hybridization of the probe portion with the analyte, or through ligation (either
by blunt ligation or "sticky end" ligation).
[0195] The term
"hybridization" refers to the process in which two single-stranded polynucleotide sequences bind
via hydrogen bonding between the bases of the nucleotide residues (i.e., base pairing)
to form a stable double-stranded complex. The hydrogen bonding may occur by Watson
Crick base pairing, Hoogstein binding, or in any other sequence specific manner. The
complex may also comprise three or more strands forming a multi stranded complex.
[0196] The term
"ligation" as used herein refers to the covalent binding or joining of two polynucleotides to
produce a single larger polynucleotide. Ligation can include chemical as well as enzymatic
ligation. In general, the ligation methods discussed herein utilize enzymatic ligation
by a ligase. The ligation may be bluntend ligation or sticky-end ligation.
[0197] The probe portions
17b, 18b may be located at a distal position with respect to the bead
16. More specifically, each of the probe portions
17b and
18b may be located at the distal end of the binding assembly
17 and
18, respectively.
[0198] The term "
distal" as used herein refers to a relative position in a binding assembly, the position
being farther from the bead. The term "
proximal" as used herein refers to a relative position in a binding assembly, the position
being closer to the bead.
[0199] When the binding occurs through the hybridization, the probe portion may be a single-stranded
or double-stranded polynucleotide sequence having a sufficient length to allow for
the hybridization to the analyte.
[0200] The probe portion may be 5'-phosophoryated on the strand(s).
[0201] The probe portion may be a single-stranded sequence having a length of 10 to 100
nt, 10 to 90 nt, 10 to 80 nt, 10 to 70 nt, 10 to 60 nt, 10 to 50 nt, 10 to 40 nt,
10 to 30 nt or 10 to 20 nt, for example, a length of 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17,
18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60, 70, 80,
90, or 100 nt. Alternatively, the probe portion may be a double-stranded sequence
having a length of 10 to 100 bp, 10 to 90 bp, 10 to 80 bp, 10 to 70 bp, 10 to 60 bp,
10 to 50 bp, 10 to 40 bp, 10 to 30 bp or 10 to 20 bp, for example, a length of 10,
11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35,
40, 45, 50, 55, 60, 70, 80, 90, or 100 bp.
[0202] When the probe portion is double-stranded, the portion may be subjected to a suitable
denaturation treatment (i.e., separation of a double-stranded sequence into single,
complementary strands by heating or a reagent such as NaOH) prior to the hybridization
to the analyte, allowing the resulting single-stranded sequence to bind to the target
analyte.
[0203] By way of example, the first analyte may be mRNA and the second analyte may be chromatin
- or conversely. In other examples, the first analyte may be mRNA and the second analyte
may be membrane proteins - or conversely.
[0204] The probe portions may be designed to have a complementary sequence of a part of
the analyte of interest.
[0205] The term "
complementary" as used herein refers to the hybridization or base pairing between nucleotides or
nucleic acids, such as, for instance, between the two strands of a DNA molecule or
between an polynucleotide primer and a primer-binding site on a single-stranded nucleic
acid to be sequenced or amplified. Complementary nucleotides are, generally, A and
T (or A and U), or C and G. Two single-stranded RNA or DNA molecules are said to be
complementary when the nucleotides of one strand pair with at least about 80% of the
nucleotides of the other strand, usually at least about 90% to 95%, and more preferably
from about 98 to 100%. Alternatively, complementarity exists when an RNA or DNA strand
will hybridize under selective hybridization conditions to its complement. Typically,
selective hybridization will occur when there is at least about 65% complementarity
over a stretch of at least 14 to 25 nucleotides, preferably at least about 75%, more
preferably at least about 90% complementary.
[0206] When the analyte is mRNA, the probe portion may comprise a poly(T) tail (a stretch
of thymine nucleotides) which has a sufficient length to allow poly(A)-tailed RNAs
to be captured by hybridization.
[0207] The term
"poly(A) taif' means a chain of adenine nucleotides, and can refer to a poly (A) tail that is to
be added to an RNA transcript at the end of transcription, or can refer to the poly
(A) tail that already exists at the 3' end of an RNA transcript. A poly (A) tail is
typically 5 to 300 nucleotides in length.
[0208] When the analyte is DNA, the probe portion may comprise polynucleotides which are
complementary to a specific target sequence, coding or non-coding, contained in the
genome. For example, the probe portion may comprise a polynucleotide sequence complementary
to repetitive sequences.
[0209] When the analyte is a protein, the protein may be labeled beforehand with a barcoded
antibody (an antibody comprising an antibody barcode and a polynucleotide capture
sequence, e.g., poly(A) tail), and the probe portion may comprise a sequence complementary
to the capture sequence, e.g., poly(T) tail.
[0210] In some embodiments, the analyte may be subjected to a pretreatment
(e.g., "tagmentation" of chromatin, which will be further described later) to add sequencing adapters.
In this case, the probe portion may be designed to contain the same sequencing adapters
to hybridize with the analyte.
[0211] The term
"sequencing adapter" as used herein refers to a molecule (e.g., polynucleotide sequence) which is adapted
to allow a sequencing instrument to sequence a target polynucleotide.
[0212] Referring back to
Fig. 9, the second binding assembly may further comprise a cleavable portion
18c between the second binding portion and the second probe portion.
Fig. 9 illustrates for convenience a photocleavable portion which is already cleaved, but
the photocleavable portion
18c is not cleaved prior to a suitable cleavage treatment.
[0213] The term
"cleavable portion" as used herein refers to a portion which can be cleaved under certain conditions,
by a specific mechanism. The cleavable portion may be electromagnetically (e.g. by
UV light of a specific wavelength), enzymatically, chemically, or thermally cleavable.
The conditions applied to cleave the cleavable portions are such that the rest of
the binding assembly is not damaged or cleaved.
[0214] Examples of the cleavable portion include a photocleavable spacer (for example, available
from Integrated DNA Technologies among other suppliers), a thermally-cleavable linker,
a linker containing a disulfide bond which is broken by reduction, a linker containing
an azo group which is broken by reduction, and a linker containing a uracil residue
which can be excised by Uracil Glycosylase or USER
® enzyme (NEB).
[0215] The cleavable portion may be a polynucleotide sequence, single-stranded or double-stranded,
which comprises a cleavable molecular moiety.
[0216] As used herein, the term
"cleavable molecular moiety" refers to any chemical bond that can be cleaved by a cleavage mechanism as explained
above. Suitable cleavable chemical bonds are well known in the art and include, but
are not limited to, acid labile bonds, protease/peptidase labile bonds, photolabile
bonds, disulfide bonds, and esterase labile bonds.
[0217] The cleavable portion may be a single-stranded sequence having a length of 5 to 100
nt, 5 to 90 nt, 5 to 80 nt, 5 to 70 nt, 5 to 60 nt, 5 to 50 nt, 5 to 40 nt, 5 to 30
nt, 5 to 20 nt, 10 to 100 nt, 10 to 90 nt, 10 to 80 nt, 10 to 70 nt, 10 to 60 nt,
10 to 50 nt, 10 to 40 nt, 10 to 30 nt or 10 to 20 nt, for example, a length of 5,
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27,
28, 29, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, or 100 nt. Alternatively, the cleavable
portion may be a double-stranded sequence having a length of 5 to 100 bp, 5 to 90
bp, 5 to 80 bp, 5 to 70 bp, 5 to 60 bp, 5 to 50 bp, 5 to 40 bp, 5 to 30 bp, 5 to 20
bp, 10 to 100 bp, 10 to 90 bp, 10 to 80 bp, 10 to 70 bp, 10 to 60 bp, 10 to 50 bp,
10 to 40 bp, 10 to 30 bp or 10 to 20 bp, for example, a length of 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35,
40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, or 100 bp.
[0218] The cleavable portion is preferably a double-stranded sequence.
[0219] The cleavable portion may be 5'-phosophoryated on the strand(s).
[0220] The cleavable portion may also comprise an additional moiety, such as 3SpC3 (three-carbon
group), which prevents the backward extension during amplification (e.g., PCR).
[0221] In some embodiments, the first binding assembly of the probe of the present invention
does not comprise a cleavable portion which is cleavable by the same mechanism as
the cleavable portion of the second binding assembly.
[0222] In some embodiments, the first binding assembly comprises a cleavable portion different
from the cleavable portion of the second binding assembly, the cleavable portion of
the first binding assembly is cleavable by a different mechanism from the cleavable
portion of the second binding assembly. For example, the first binding assembly may
comprise a cleavable portion which is chemically cleavable while the second binding
assembly may comprise a cleavable portion which is electromagnetically, e.g. UV-cleavable.
[0223] In other embodiments, the first binding assembly does not comprise any cleavable
portion as defined above. In this case, preferably, the first bead-binding portion
17a is directly connected to the first probe portion
17b or at least one barcode portion
17d, which is described below.
[0224] Referring back to
Fig. 9, the first and second binding assemblies may further comprise at least one barcode
portion
17d,
18d.
Fig. 9 illustrates three barcode portions
17d, 18d in each binding assembly, but the binding assembly may comprise one barcode portion,
two barcode portions, four barcode portions, and so on.
[0225] The term
"barcode portion" generally refers to a polynucleotide sequence that can be used as an identifier for
an associated analyte, or as an identifier of the source of an associated analyte,
such as a cell-of-origin (cell barcode).
[0226] The barcode portion(s) of the first binding assembly is/are preferably located between
the first bead-binding portion and the first probe portion. The barcode portion(s)
of the second binding assembly is/are preferably located between the cleavable portion
and the second probe portion.
[0227] The barcode portion(s) are preferably the same between the first binding assembly
and the second binding assembly.
[0228] The barcode portion may be a single-stranded or double-stranded polynucleotide sequence.
The barcode portion may be a single-stranded having a length of 5 to 100 nt, 5 to
90 nt, 5 to 80 nt, 5 to 70 nt, 5 to 60 nt, 5 to 50 nt, 5 to 40 nt, 5 to 30 nt, 5 to
20 nt, 10 to 100 nt, 10 to 90 nt, 10 to 80 nt, 10 to 70 nt, 10 to 60 nt, 10 to 50
nt, 10 to 40 nt, 10 to 30 nt or 10 to 20 nt, for example, a length of 5, 6, 7, 8,
9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29,
30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, or 100 nt. Alternatively, the barcode portion
may be a double-stranded sequence having a length of 5 to 100 bp, 5 to 90 bp, 5 to
80 bp, 5 to 70 bp, 5 to 60 bp, 5 to 50 bp, 5 to 40 bp, 5 to 30 bp, 5 to 20 bp, 10
to 100 bp, 10 to 90 bp, 10 to 80 bp, 10 to 70 bp, 10 to 60 bp, 10 to 50 bp, 10 to
40 bp, 10 to 30 bp or 10 to 20 bp, for example, a length of 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,
12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35, 40,
45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, or 100 bp.
[0229] Each barcode portion is preferably a double-stranded polynucleotide sequence.
[0230] Each barcode portion may be 5'-phosphorylated on the strand(s).
[0231] In some embodiments, the first binding assembly and/or the second binding assembly
further comprises at least one additional portion selected from a primer-binding site
capable of hybridizing a primer, a sequencing adapter, a spacer, a tag, a sample barcode,
a unique molecular identifier (UMI), or any combination thereof.
[0232] Examples of the primer include a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primer, reverse
transcription (RT)-PCR primer, library preparation primer, or a sequencing primer.
[0233] Example of the sequencing adapter include a library preparation primer (such as Illumina
PEI, PE2 or PE2-N6), library reading sequences (Read1 (R1), Read2 (R2), Read1N (R1N),
Read2N (R2N)) a flow cell binding site (such as Illumina P5 and P7), or an index sequence.
The flow cell binding site, as used herein, refers to an polynucleotide sequence which
binds to a complementary sequence immobilized at the surface of a flow cell which
is a part of a sequencing instrument.
[0234] The term
"tag" as used herein refers to a moiety or part of a molecule that enables or enhances
the ability to detect and/or identify, either directly or indirectly, a molecule or
molecular complex (e.g., binding assembly).
[0235] The term
"sample barcode" (also referred to as
"sample identifier") is a known polynucleotide sequence that can be used to identify a sample.
[0236] The term
"unique molecular identifier" or
"UMI" as used herein refers to a sequencing linker or a subtype of nucleic acid barcode
for detecting and quantifying unique amplified products. In theory, no two original
fragments should have the same UMI sequence. As such, UMIs can be used to determine
if two similar sequence reads are derived from different original fragments or if
they are simply duplicates created during amplification (such as by PCR).
[0237] The at least one additional portion may be located at the distal end of the bead-binding
portion, or of the cleavable portion if present. Specifically, when the barcode portion(s)
is/are present, the additional portion(s) may be located between the bead-binding
portion and the barcode portion(s), or between the cleavable portion and the barcode
portion(s). Alternatively, the additional portion(s) may be located between the barcode
portion(s) and the probe portion.
[0238] In the probe of the present invention, the first binding assembly may further comprise
connectors for the first binding assembly, and the second binding assembly may further
comprise connectors for the second binding assembly. The connectors for the first
binding assembly are preferably different from the connectors for the second binding
assembly.
[0239] The term
"connector" as used herein refers to a molecule or segment of a molecule (e.g., polynucleotide
sequence) which is capable of binding to another corresponding (e.g., complementary)
connector. In the probe of the invention., at least one connector may be present at
one or both ends of each portion. One connector at an end of a portion can bind to
a corresponding connector at an end of another portion, thereby allowing the connection
of the two portions via the connectors.
[0240] The connectors for the first binding assembly may be the same with each other or
different from each other. The connectors for the first binding assembly are preferably
different from each other.
[0241] The connectors for the second binding assembly may be the same with each other or
different from each other. The connectors for the second binding assembly are preferably
different from each other.
[0242] In cases where two or more barcode portion(s) are present, the barcode portions may
be attached to each other via the connectors. In other words, the barcode portions
of the first binding assembly may be attached via the connectors for the first binding
assembly while the barcode portions of the second binding assembly may be attached
via the connectors for the second binding assembly.
[0243] The other portions as explained above may be also attached to each other via connectors.
In other words, the portions of the first binding assembly may be attached via the
connectors for the first binding assembly while the portions of the second binding
assembly may be attached via the connectors for the second binding assembly.
[0244] For example, the barcode portion(s) of the first binding assembly may be attached
to each other, to the first bead-binding portion, and/or to the first probe portion
via the connectors for the first binding assembly, and the barcode portion(s) of the
second binding assembly may be attached to each other, to the cleavable portion, and/or
to the second probe portion via the connectors for the second binding assembly.
[0245] The connectors for the first and second binding assemblies may be a single-stranded
polynucleotide sequence having a length of 2 to 50 nt, 2 to 40 nt, 2 to 30 nt, 3 to
20 nt, 4 to 10 nt, for example, a length of 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50 nt.
[0246] The connectors are preferably single-stranded polynucleotide sequences located at
an end of a portion (e.g., 3' overhang or 5' overhang). A single-stranded connector
at one end of a portion may bind to a complementary single-stranded connector at one
end of another portion to form a double-stranded sequence, thereby allowing the two
portions to be connected to each other via the connectors.
[0247] The bead-binding portions may be attached to the bead after the bead formation or
during the bead formation (the binding portions may be pre-mixed in the gel precursor
for beads, or the gel precursor and the binding portions may be co-injected to the
microfluidic chip).
[0248] The first binding assembly may be assembled by successive ligation of the above-described
portions for the first binding assembly.
[0249] The second binding assembly may be assembled by successive ligation of the above-described
portions for the second binding assembly.
[0250] Alternatively, the first binding assembly and the second binding assembly may be
assembled by hybridization and primer extension.
[0251] The term
"primer extension" as used herein refers to the extension (polymerization) of a nucleic acid sequence
from a free 3'-hydroxy group, thereby creating a strand of nucleic acid complementary
to an opposing strand.
[0252] As explained above, the first and second binding assemblies may be single-stranded
or double-stranded. However, this does not mean that binding assemblies have to be
one or another. For example, the binding assemblies may be partially single-stranded
and partially double-stranded (e.g., the probe portion is single-stranded and the
rest is double-stranded). They may be also subjected to denaturation or hybridization
treatment depending on the application. For example, if binding assemblies are double-stranded
at the time of fabrication, the binding assemblies may be subjected to a suitable
denaturation treatment prior to the hybridization to the analytes, allowing the resulting
single-stranded sequence to bind to the target analyte.
[0253] Although the above description relates to a probe comprising a first binding assembly
and a second binding assembly, it is also possible to have more than two binding assemblies.
Each additional (third, fourth, etc.) binding assembly may be similar to the first
binding assembly or to the second binding assembly described above. Each binding assembly
comprises a probe portion which binds to a different analyte. For example, in one
variation, the probe comprises a first binding assembly which does not comprise any
cleavable portion, a second binding assembly which comprises a cleavable portion which
may be cleaved by a first mechanism, and a third binding assembly which comprises
a cleavable portion which may be cleaved by a second mechanism different from the
first mechanism. More generally, it is preferred that at most one binding assembly
is devoid of a cleavable portion, and that all binding assemblies which comprise a
cleavable portion have different cleavable portions, which are cleaved by different
mechanisms.
Separating the first analyte and the second analyte
[0254] Referring again to
Fig. 7a, when a droplet additionally contains a biological sample, at least the first analyte
may bind to the first binding assembly and the second analyte may bind to the second
binding assembly. The first analyte and the second analytes may be initially dispersed
in the droplet for example due to a lysis buffer which may be comprised in or may
constitute the first fluid.
[0255] The method of the invention may further comprise, before extracting the bead from
the droplet, a step of releasing the second binding assembly from the bead in the
droplet, while the first analyte bound to the first binding assembly remains tethered
to the bead.
[0256] Preferably, the first analyte binds to the first binding assembly before the release
of the second binding assembly from the probe. Preferably, the second analyte binds
to the second binding assembly before the release of the second binding assembly from
the probe; in this case, during the release step, the second analyte is released from
the probe together with the second binding assembly. In other variations, the second
analyte may bind to the second binding assembly after it has been released from the
probe.
[0257] The second binding assembly may be released from the bead via the cleavage of the
cleavable portion in a treatment step. This treatment step may comprise subjecting
the droplets to specific conditions conducive to cleavage, such as exposure to a certain
temperature, exposure to electromagnetic radiation (such as UV light), addition of
an enzyme and/or of a reactant into the droplets.
[0258] For convenience, the separation of two analytes is explained below, but the separation
of two or more analytes is also possible. Specifically, two or more binding assemblies
can be tethered to the bead, as described above, allowing for the separation of two
or more analytes. Use may be made in particular of different cleavable portions in
different binding assemblies, so that that release of binding assemblies for different
analytes from the bead may be performed in different treatment steps.
[0259] After the second binding assembly has been released, the beads are extracted from
the droplets, as described above. Thus, the first analyte may be recovered with the
beads, while the second analyte may be recovered with the droplets.
[0260] Fig. 7b illustrates that the free second binding assembly (not bound with the second analyte)
is released and dispersed in the droplet. In this case, the free second binding assembly
may then bind to the second analyte. Alternatively, the second binding assembly may
capture (bind to) the second analyte before the release in the droplet, and then the
second analyte bound to the second binding assembly may be released and dispersed
in the droplet.
Biological application for a multiomics analysis
[0261] The method of the present invention can be used for performing multiomics analysis
(e.g., transcriptomic, genomic, epigenetic, proteomic; metabolomic, and/or lipidomic
analyses). Particularly, the method of the present invention can be used for performing
a single-cell multiomics analysis. As an example, the use of the probe for studying
chromatin and mRNA will be explained below.
[0262] Fig. 10 schematically illustrates the probe used in this example..
[0263] The probe
15 contains a bead
16, a first binding assembly
17 and a second binding assembly
18. The bead may contain a magnetic material such as magnetic fluid, a magnetic nanoparticle
or a magnetic core.
[0264] The first binding assembly
17 may contain, from proximal to distal, a first bead-binding portion
BB1, barcode portions
BC1 to
BC3, additional portions
R2 (primer-binding site) and
UMI (unique molecular identifier), and a first probe portion
polyT. The first binding assembly
17 may be double stranded, except for the single-stranded
UMI and
polyT.
[0265] The second binding assembly
18 may contain, from proximal to distal, a second bead-binding portion
BB2, a cleavable portion
PC, an additional portion
P5 (illumina flow cell adapter), barcode portions
BC1 to
BC3, and a second probe portion
R1N. The cleavable portion may be photocleavable. The second binding assembly
18 may be double stranded.
[0266] In this example, the first probe portion
polyT (poly(T) tail) may capture poly (A)-tailed mRNA, and the second probe portion
R1N captures DNA tagged with R1N.
[0267] Fig. 10 illustrates for convenience a photocleavable portion which is already cleaved, but
the photocleavable portion is not cleaved prior to a suitable cleavage treatment.
[0268] Connectors are not shown in
Fig. 5, but all the portions of the first binding assembly
17 and the second binding assembly
18 may be attached to each other via connectors for the first binding assembly and via
connectors for the second binding assembly, respectively.
[0270] The tagmentation is a process in which unfragmented DNA is cleaved and tagged for
analysis. CUT&Tag is a cleavage and tagmentation method in which a complex of protein
A and a Tn5 transposase which is conjugated to sequencing adapters, performs antibody-targeted
cleavage of chromatin and simultaneous addition of the adapters.
[0271] In this example, when the isolated nuclei are subjected to CUT&Tag, DNA sequences
corresponding to the binding sites of the target protein or histone modification of
interest may be modified at 5' and 3' ends with sequencing adapters, such as R1N and
R2N. In this case, as shown in
Fig. 10, the probe portion of the second binding assembly may comprise the sequencing adapter
(for example,
R1N).
[0272] Below, the term "bead" may be used as the bead to which the first binding assembly
and second binding assembly are attached. In other words, the "bead" may be used interchangeably
with the
"probe."
[0273] By reference to
Fig. 7a, the beads
3 in a fluid, preferably an aqueous fluid, may be fed to the main channel
1 of a microfluidic chip through an upstream side channel. In this example, the beads
3 may be packed in the fluid so that the bead release can be easily synchronized with
the droplet generation by tuning the flow rates.
[0274] The tagmented nuclei
14 in a nuclei buffer may be fed to the main channel
1 via another upstream side channel. The nuclei buffer may contain a primer for downstream
analysis, such as Reverse i7 primer (5'-P7-i7-R2N-3'; P7 is an illumina flow cell
adapter, i7 is a sample barcode, and R2N is an sequencing primer site). A lysis/PCR
buffer may be passed through the main channel
1. The fluid containing the beads (probes)
3, the nuclei buffer, and the lysis/PCR buffer may be the same or miscible with each
other. A fluid which is immiscible with the fluid(s) passing through/fed to the main
channel
1 (preferably fluorocarbon-based or oil-based) may be passed through at least one downstream
side channel
2 to form a bead-containing droplet (which may also contain a tagmented nucleus
14).
[0275] In the droplet, mRNA may bind to the first binding assembly at the first probe portion
via the hybridization between the poly(A) tail of the mRNA and the poly(T) tail
(polyT) of the first probe portion. The tagmented nuclei (DNA) of target may bind to the
second binding assembly at the second probe portion via the hybridization between
the R1N of the tagmented DNA and the
R1N of the second probe portion. This hybridization between the R1N of the tagmented
DNA and the R1N of the second probe portion may occur after the cleavage treatment,
such as during the downstream amplification process (e.g., PCR).
[0276] As shown in
Fig. 7b, the droplets may be then collected in a reservoir. The second binding assembly may
be released from the bead via the cleavage of the cleavable portion by a treatment
step. This treatment step may comprise subjecting the droplets to specific conditions
conducive to cleavage, such as exposure to a certain temperature, exposure to electromagnetic
radiation (such as UV light), addition of an enzyme and/or of a reactant into the
droplets. The droplet illustrated in
Fig. 7b shows that the free second binding assembly is released in the droplet (the second
binding assembly and the tagmented DNA fragments are dispersed in the droplet) while
the first binding assembly remains on the bead, capturing mRNA molecules via the first
probe portion. However, the tagmented DNA fragments may be captured by the second
binding assembly prior to the treatment step of cleavage, and then after the treatment
step, the second analyte bound to the second binding assembly may be released in the
droplet.
[0277] Subsequently, the droplets may be reinjected to the microfluidic device of the invention,
and beads are extracted from droplets, as explained above.. Specifically, as shown
in
Fig. 7c, the droplets in a fluid are reinjected to the microfluidic device of the invention
through the main channel, and a fluid which is immiscible with the fluid containing
the droplets is supplied to the microfluidic device in a downstream (in this example,
via two side channels), and the beads and the droplets are extracted at a constriction
5 of the microfluidic device.
[0278] As shown in
Fig. 6, for example, the droplets
4 and extracted beads
3 may be collected (from an outlet of the main channel), as explained above, in a collecting
reservoir
9. The collecting reservoir is as described above.
[0279] The extracted beads
3 may be separately collected using a magnetic element
10 to the collecting reservoir
9 while the droplets
4 may gather at or near the surface of the immiscible fluid the as the droplets are
generally less dense than the fluid.
[0280] Optionally, the emulsion of the droplets may be withdrawn from the collecting reservoir
9 via the outlet conduit
13 (for example using a syringe or a peristaltic pump or the like), while the beads
remain in the collecting reservoir
9 owing to the magnetic element
10.
[0281] The emulsion of droplets may be further transported to another reservoir, such as
another test tube. The beads
3 and droplets
4, thus collected separately, may be subjected to different downstream analyses.
[0282] Fig. 11a illustrates schematically the content of an extracted droplet. In the droplet, the
released second binding assembly
18 (excluding the binding portion and the cleavable portion), DNA fragment
19 tagmented with R1N and R2N at 5' and 3' ends, and a Reverse i7 primer (R2N-i7-P7)
contained in the nuclei buffer may be dispersedly present. The droplets are then subjected
to droplet PCR of the DNA fragments
19, using the released partial second binding assembly
18 and Reverse i7 as primers (in other words, the second prove portion binds to the
DNA fragment after the release of the binding assembly from the bead).
[0283] The PCR conditions may be optimized to increase the yield of the target sequence
of DNA fragments
19.
[0284] The resulting PCR products
20 (
Fig.
11b) may be then purified by a conventional cleanup kit, such as Qiagen Minelute or Macherey-Nagel
Nucleospin, and/or tby size selection with SPRI (Solid-phase reversible immobilization)
beads to remove primers. The sample may be also verified for the quality control.
The sample may be sequenced by next generation sequencing or high-throughput sequencing.
[0285] The term
"sequencing" or
"(to) sequence" as used herein refers to a method by which the identity of at least 10 consecutive
nucleotides (e.g., the identity of at least 20, at least 50, at least 100 or at least
200 or more consecutive nucleotides) of a polynucleotide sequence is obtained.
[0286] The terms
"next-generation sequencing" or
"high-throughput sequencing", as used herein, refer to the so-called parallelized sequencing-by-synthesis or sequencing-by-ligation
platforms currently employed by Illumina, Life Technologies, and Roche, etc. Next-generation
sequencing methods may also include nanopore sequencing methods such as that commercialized
by Oxford Nanopore Technologies, electronic-detection based methods such as Ion Torrent
technology commercialized by Life Technologies, or single-molecule fluorescence-based
methods such as that commercialized by Pacific Biosciences.
[0287] The extracted beads may be used for RNA analysis, based on conventional approaches
such as drop-seq, smart-seq2 and smart-seq3. Specifically, the beads may be subjected
to reverse transcription and template switching.
[0288] The term
"reverse transcription (RT)" as used herein means a method wherein a complementary DNA (cDNA) copy of an RNA molecule
is synthesized. The cDNA product can be used as a template for PCR.
[0289] The term
"template switching" as used herein refers to an activity of a polymerase that is capable of switching
template strands in a homology dependent manner during DNA synthesis. An example of
a polymerase with template switching activity is M-MLV reverse transcriptase.
[0290] As shown in
Fig. 12a, during the reverse transcription, cDNA
22 may be synthesized by a reverse transcriptase (e.g., M-MLV type reverse transcriptase)
using the captured mRNA
21 as a template. A few additional nucleotides may be added by the reverse transcriptase
at the 3' end of the newly synthesized
cDNA strand (for example, CCC as illustrated in
Fig. 12a), which can then anneal to the matching 3'-end riboguanosines (GGG as illustrated in
Fig. 12a) of a template switching oligo (
TSO), which is complementary to
R1. Thus, the reverse transcriptase may switch the template strands from
21 to
TSO to continue the polymerization. The
TSO may be contained in a reverse transcription buffer. The beads may be treated with
exonuclease I
(Fig. 12b).
[0291] Subsequently, the
cDNA bound on the bead may be amplified, using
R1 primer and
R2 primer, which results in dispersed double-stranded cDNA in a solution, no longer
bound on the bead
(Fig. 12c). The
cDNA may be then fragmented and tagmented with sequencing adapters such as
R1N primers on 3' end and
R2N primers on 5' end
(Fig. 12d). For the tagmentation of cDNA, a conventional kit such as NEBNext Ultra II may be
used. As shown in
Fig. 12d, at the end of the fragmentation and tagmentation, fragments of various lengths may
be obtained: fragments containing
R2, barcode portions
(BC), UMI, cDNA and
R1N, fragments containing
R2N, cDNA and
R1N, and fragments containing
R2N, cDNA and
R1.
[0292] Only the fragments containing
R2, barcode portions
(BC), UMI, cDNA and
R1N may be further amplified by PCR using primers containing sequencing adapters (e.g.,
primers
P7-i7-R2 and
R1N-P5). Thus, the resulting PCR products may be added with sequencing adapters
P7 and
P5 at their both ends. The final PCR products may be purified by size selection, using
SPRI beads, for example, to remove primers, and subjected to be quality control such
as Qubit, Tapestation, Bioanalyzer and a conventional gel electrophoresis. The sample
may be then sequenced by next generation sequencing or high-throughput sequencing,
for example.
[0293] Separation of mRNA and chromatin has been discussed above, but handling two or more
analytes is also possible. For example, DNA/RNA-barcoded antibodies containing a polyA
tail may be used in addition. In this case, three binding assemblies, one with C&T
and the photocleavable portion (for chromatin) and two with oligoT sequences (for
mRNA and protein) may be tethered to each bead. This way, three analytes may be analyzed.
EXAMPLES
[0294] The following examples illustrate the invention without limiting it.
Example 1 - Polyacrylamide beads synthesis
[0295] Polyacrylamide beads were prepared by generating droplets on a conventional microfluidic
chip.
[0296] Specifically, as shown in
Fig. 1a, a gel precursor (58% v/v H
2O, 2.3% v/v Ferrofluid (Ferrotec
® EMG700SP), 11.3% v/v TBEST buffer (10 mM Tris-HCI [pH 8.0], 137 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCI,
10 mM EDTA and 0.1% (v/v) Triton X-100), 28.4% 4X AB solution (36% v/v Acrylamide/Bis
solution 40% (w/w) molar ratio 19:1, 25.8% v/v Acrylamide solution 40% (w/w), 38.2%
v/v H
2O)) was injected through a main channel 1 at 320 µL/h, 2.5% w/v APS (ammonium persulfate)
as a cross-liking initiator was injected through a side channel at 34.5 µL/h, and
oil (HFE-7500 with 1.5% Fluosurf (Emulseo) and 0.4% v/v TEMED) as a continuous phase
was injected through two side channels 2 at 550 µL/h.
[0297] The median diameter Dv50 of the obtained droplets was approximately 40 µm, and the
droplet generation throughput was between 3000 and 4000 droplets/s.
[0298] The resulting droplets were kept at 60°C overnight for cross-linking to form beads.
The emulsion of beads in the oil was broken with perfluoro-octan-1-ol and the remaining
oil was dissolved in hexane. The beads were suspended in TBEST to let them swell in
TBEST, thereby having a final median diameter Dv50 of 50 µm. The beads were passed
through a cell strainer to remove any dust and large beads.
Example 2 - Encapsulation of beads and biological samples in droplets
[0299] The beads from Example 1 were packed by centrifugation at 4000 g for 1 min, and the
supernatant was removed.
[0300] In a microfluidic chip (similar to the one used in
Klein et al. Cell. 2015) equipped with syringe pumps, a buffer containing 0.1% Tween
® 20 surfactant was injected at 200 µL/h and co-flowed with a diluted suspension of
cell nuclei in phosphate buffer saline and 15% Optiprep
™ medium at 200 µL/h and the packed beads at 35 µL/h through a main channel. Oil (HFE-7500
supplied by 3M
™ supplemented by 1.5% of stabilizer Fluosurf
® (Emulseo) or 0.75% of surfactant supplied by Ran Biotech) was injected at 300 µL/h
through two side channels to form bead-containing droplets.
[0301] The beads were released at the same frequency as the droplet generation so that the
bead loading (proportion of bead-containing droplets) was approximately 90%.
[0302] The generated bead-containing droplets were collected in a reservoir made of an 1.5-mL
Eppendorf tube with a PDMS plug and inlet and outlet conduits inserted in the tube
through the plug as shown in
Fig. 6. The droplets were collected in the reservoir through the inlet conduit and remained
packed near the surface as they were lighter in density than the oil.
[0303] The packed bead-containing droplets (the volume of the droplets ranging between 0.5
nL to 1 nL, the bead diameter of 50 µm) were taken out of the reservoir using an oil-filled
syringe connected to the outlet and mounted on a syringe pump, then reinjected to
a microfluidic chip for bead extraction by pushing the droplets backward.
Example 3 - Bead extraction using a microfluidic chip
[0304] A microfluidic chip was fabricated by a standard photolithography process. Specifically,
a SU8-2050 photoresist mold was spun on a 4-inch (approximately 100 mm) silicon wafer
having a thickness of approximately 60 µm, then exposed through a chromium mask and
developed according to the manufacturer's instructions. The mold was then silanized
with fluorinated silane, and PDMS (curing agent at a ratio 1:10) was poured and baked
2h at 70°C. This process was repeated twice to prepare a chip having two different
thicknesses.
[0305] As shown in
Fig. 3a to
Fig. 3c and
Fig. 4, the microfluidic chip had a main channel
1 having an inlet (width: 80 µm, thickness: 60-70) for reinjecting the bead-containing
droplet phase and an outlet (width: 110 µm, thickness: 45-50 µm) for recovering beads
and droplets, and a downstream channel comprising two side channels
2 (width: 80 µm, thickness: 45-50 µm) for introducing oil to break the droplets. The
main channel also comprised a constriction
5 with a gradually reduced width, the minimum width being 20 µm wide and the thickness
being 45-50 µm.
[0306] As shown in
Fig. 3a, the bead-containing droplets in the oil were passed through the main channel
1 from the inlet at a flow rate of 150 µL/h. The droplets were then passed through
the constriction
5, and oil (same composition as in Example 2) was supplied through the two side channels
2 downstream of the constriction
5 at a flow rate of 600 µL/h.
[0307] The main channel
1 had a non-narrowed portion extending from the inlet of the main channel to a transition
area, and a narrowed portion extending from the transition area to the constriction
5, i.e., the thickness of the main channel was equal to or slightly smaller than the
bead diameter (approximately 50 µm) after the transition area, so that the beads were
slightly compressed in the thickness direction, and the friction force kept the beads
at the rear of the droplets. The beads were then extracted from the droplets upon
passing through the constriction
5.
[0308] The droplets and the extracted beads were collected in a collecting reservoir equipped
with a plug and inlet and outlet conduits inserted in the reservoir through the plug,
as shown in
Fig. 6. The extracted beads were separately collected using a magnet while the droplets
were packed near the surface as they were lighter than the oil and were withdrawn
from the test tube via the outlet conduit.
Example 4 - Characterization of flow rates
[0309] The flow rates of droplets and oil were characterized. As shown in
Fig. 5, various flow rates of droplets ranging from 50 to 450 µL/h and flow rates of oil
ranging from 50 to 2000 µL/h were tested and the extraction success rate was reported.
In
Fig. 5, Qdrops represents the flow rate of the droplets and Qoil represents the flow rate
of the oil (second fluid) supplied via the side channels.
[0310] The beads were prepared as described in Example 1, except that the median diameter
Dv50 of the beads was 47 µm and the compositions were changed as follows: droplets
composed of 100mM Tris HCI pH8 and 0.1% v/v Tween
® 20, with a volume of approximately 0.8 nL; oil composed of HFE-7500 by 3M
®+ 1.5% Fluosurf
®.
[0311] Using a fast camera, footage of extracting the beads form the droplets was recorded.
In each video (40 to 200 droplets), the ratio of the number of extracted beads to
the total number of droplets was determined as a percentage.
[0312] There was a sharp transition in the extraction rate from 0% to 100%, showing that
the process is highly stable, and there is almost no region of instability (i.e. where
approximately half of the beads were extracted). When the flow rates were properly
adjusted, a 100% extraction rate could be kept on extended periods of time.
[0313] It is also noted that Qdrops varied between 50 to 450 µL/h, showing a very large
operating range of the flow rate. The throughput was high (from approximately 20 droplets/s
at 50 µL/h to approximately 150 droplets/s at 450 µL/h).
[0314] If the droplet size, bead size, constriction size, surfactant concentration, or stabilizer
concentration are changed, slightly different results can be expected as the surface
tension and shear force will be modified; however, the trend is expected to remain
the same.