Surface biopassivation of replicated poly(dimethylsiloxane) microfluidic channels and application to heterogeneous immunoreaction with on-chip fluorescence detection

V. Linder, E. Verpoorte, W. Thormann*, N.F. De Rooij, H. Sigrist

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

170 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) appeared recently as a material of choice for rapid and accurate replication of polymer-based microfluidic networks. However, due to its hydrophobicity, the surface strongly interacts with apolar analytes or species containing apolar domains, resulting in significant uncontrolled adsorption on channel walls. This contribution describes the application and characterization of a PDMS surface treatment that considerably decreases adsorption of low and high molecular mass substances to channel walls while maintaining a modest cathodic electroosmotic flow. Channels are modified with a three-layer biotin-neutravidin sandwich coating, made of biotinylated IgG, neutravidin, and biotinylated dextran. By replacing biotinylated dextran with any biotinylated reagent, the modified surface can be readily patterned with biochemical probes, such as antibodies. Combination of probe immobilization chemistry with low nonspecific binding enables affinity binding assays within channel networks. The example of an electrokinetic driven, heterogeneous immunoreaction for human IgG is described.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4181-4189
Number of pages9
JournalAnalytical Chemistry
Volume73
Issue number17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1-Sept-2001

Keywords

  • antibody
  • avidin
  • biotin
  • dextran
  • dimeticone
  • immunoglobulin G
  • reagent
  • accuracy
  • article
  • binding affinity
  • fluorescence
  • immunoreactivity
  • materials
  • materials testing
  • molecular weight

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