Their
development of these tiny silicon “chaperones,” detailed
today in an advance online publication in a forthcoming
issue of the journal Nature Materials, represents
an important new achievement in the emerging field
of “microfluidics,” in which new methods are sought
to create, transport and experiment with ever smaller
volumes of fluids.
Much
as the development of smaller and smaller computer
chips has transformed the electronics industry, the
“smaller is better” movement of microfluidics is already
beginning to pave the way for a new wave of developments
in biotechnology and nanotechnology. One major problem
now facing scientists in the biotechnology industry
is how to handle tiny volumes of liquid containing
precious samples of DNA, bacteria, viruses or other
nano-sized particles without losing much of the samples.
“As
the sample volume becomes smaller and smaller, the
number of molecules that stick to the insides of a
micropipette or any other kind of micro-channel becomes
a significant fraction of the total number of molecules
in the sample,” says Michael Sailor, a professor of
chemistry and biochemistry who headed the UCSD effort.
“This problem has spawned the idea of a ‘lab in a
drop.' A sphere has the lowest ratio of surface area
to volume, so if a droplet containing the sample of
interest can be manipulated without it coming into
contact with the walls of its container, one can minimize
the amount of material lost.”
The
UCSD development took shape when Jason Dorvee, one
of Sailor's graduate students, added a magnetic iron
oxide to microscopic chips of silicon fabricated in
Sailor's laboratory so that they could be easily moved
about with a hand-held magnet. These tiny chips, developed
several years ago by Sailor and Jamie Link, a graduate
researcher in Sailor's laboratory, are also known
as “smart dust.
“We
call them ‘smart dust' because their nanostructure
can be engineered to give them rudimentary sensing,
data processing, communication, and homing capabilities,”
says Sailor, “Jason's addition of magnetic properties
allows us to direct their motion.”
Sailor
and his group initially developed these microscopic
sensors so they could be programmed to detect and
surround specific objects like a drop of toxic chemical
or a cancer cell. Their latest development now provides
the scientists with the additional capability to control
and move this assembly of particles and their cargo
to specific areas for examination or experimentation.
But of even greater importance, their method could
be adapted for future industrial microfluidics processes
to mix and even neutralize chemicals without the need
for pumps, valves, channels or pipettes.
“It's
a new way of doing microfluidics,” explains Dorvee.
“With this system, you can transport tiny material
suspended in water through oil efficiently without
pumps and channels.”
Once
he added the superparamagnetic iron oxide to the silicon
to make them magnetic, Dorvee made one side of the
smart dust hydrophobic, or water repelling, and the
other side hydrophilic, or water loving. This process,
developed last year by Link and Sailor, assured that
the tiny smart dust chips would always spontaneously
assemble on the outside of organic droplets, such
as oil, immersed in water or water droplets immersed
in oil. When the chips come into contact with different
chemicals, small changes in the color of their surfaces,
which are detectable using a spectrometer based on
a modified digital camera, allow the scientists to
remotely identify the specific chemicals encased by
the smart dust.
In
their experiments, the chemists were able to move
these smart-dust-encased droplets with hand-held magnets
precisely within liquid-filled Petri dishes. The researchers
were also able to move the droplets magnetically into
contact with a tiny capillary tube, where their contents
could be drained, mixed with other chemicals, then
refilled with a microsyringe. This capability, shown
in the sequence of photos above, would be extremely
useful for scientists handling tiny volumes of valuable
biological molecules or for any number of future industrial
microfluidics processes.
“We
can manipulate material that wouldn't normally be
affected by magnetic fields, such as organic and inorganic
solutions, cells, DNA and proteins,” says Dorvee.
To
demonstrate how the magnetic silicon chaperones could
be used to perform chemistry on a miniscule scale,
Dorvee encased two tiny droplets with the smart dust,
one containing a solution of potassium iodide and
another containing a solution of silver nitrate, in
a hydrophilic organic solvent. With a spectrometer
pointed at the surfaces of the two droplets, he identified
the two compounds, then magnetically brought the droplets
into contact. This resulted in a chemical reaction
that produced silver iodide, which he was again able
to identify remotely from the color changes on the
surface of the chips.
“With
the smart dust chaperones, we can actually make little
microbottles that not only contain specific chemicals,
but that we can identify with a label,” says Dorvee.
Other
coauthors of the paper besides Sailor and Dorvee were
Sangeeta Bhatia, an associate professor of bioengineering
at UCSD's Jacobs School of Engineering, and Austin
Derfus, a graduate student working in her laboratory.
The project was supported by grants from the Air Force
Office of Scientific Research and the National Cancer
Institute.
Contact:
Kim McDonald
kmcdonald@ucsd.edu
858-534-7572
University of California - San Diego