Issue 6, 2004

Use of laminar flow patterning for miniaturised biochemical assays

Abstract

Laminar flow in microfluidic chambers was used to construct low (one dimensional) density arrays suitable for miniaturized biochemical assays. By varying the ratio of flows of two guiding streams flanking a sample stream, precise focusing and positioning of the latter was achieved, and reactive species carried in the sample stream were deposited on functionalized chip surfaces as discrete 50 µm wide lanes. Using different model systems we have confirmed the method's suitability for qualitative screening and quantification tasks in receptor–ligand assays, recording biotin–streptavidin interactions, DNA-hybridization and DNA-triplex formation. The system is simple, fast, reproducible, flexible, and has small sample requirements.

Graphical abstract: Use of laminar flow patterning for miniaturised biochemical assays

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Jun 2004
Accepted
24 Sep 2004
First published
11 Nov 2004

Lab Chip, 2004,4, 654-657

Use of laminar flow patterning for miniaturised biochemical assays

B. Regenberg, U. Krühne, M. Beyer, L. H. Pedersen, M. Simón, O. R. T. Thomas, J. Nielsen and T. Ahl, Lab Chip, 2004, 4, 654 DOI: 10.1039/B409141H

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