Issue 14, 2024

Development of a self-powered digital LAMP microfluidic chip (SP-dChip) for the detection of emerging viruses

Abstract

Point-of-care (POC) diagnostics have emerged as a crucial technology for emerging pathogen detections to enable rapid and on-site detection of infectious diseases. However, current POC devices often suffer from limited sensitivity with poor reliability to provide quantitative readouts. In this paper, we present a self-powered digital loop-mediated isothermal amplification (dLAMP) microfluidic chip (SP-dChip) for the rapid and quantitative detection of nucleic acids. The SP-dChip utilizes a vacuum lung design to passively digitize samples into individual nanoliter wells for high-throughput analysis. The superior digitization scheme is further combined with reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) to demonstrate dLAMP detection of Zika virus (ZIKV). Firstly, the LAMP assay is loaded into the chip and passively digitized into individual wells. Mineral oil is then pipetted through the chip to differentiate each well as an individual reactor. The chip did not require any external pumping or power input for rapid and reliable results to detect ZIKA RNA as low as 100 copies per μL within one hour. As such, this SP-dChip offers a new class of solutions for truly affordable, portable, and quantitative POC detections for emerging viruses.

Graphical abstract: Development of a self-powered digital LAMP microfluidic chip (SP-dChip) for the detection of emerging viruses

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Mar 2024
Accepted
20 Jun 2024
First published
20 Jun 2024

Lab Chip, 2024,24, 3490-3497

Development of a self-powered digital LAMP microfluidic chip (SP-dChip) for the detection of emerging viruses

T. Kasputis, P. Yeh, L. Liu, J. Marano, J. Weger-Lucarelli, K. Du, L. Lin and J. Chen, Lab Chip, 2024, 24, 3490 DOI: 10.1039/D4LC00265B

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