Issue 4, 2015

A multiple path photonic lab on a chip for parallel protein concentration measurements

Abstract

We propose a PDMS-based photonic system for the accurate measurement of protein concentration with minute amounts of the sample. As opposed to the state of the art approach, in the multiple path photonic lab on a chip (MPHIL), analyte concentration or molar absorptivity is obtained with a single injection step, by performing simultaneous parallel optical measurements varying the optical path length. Also, as opposed to the standard calibration protocol, the MPHIL approach does not require a series of measurements at different concentrations. MPHIL has three main advantages: firstly the possibility of dynamically selecting the path length, always working in the absorbance vs. concentration linear range for each target analyte. Secondly, a dramatic reduction of the total volume of the sample required to obtain statistically reliable results. Thirdly, since only one injection is required, the measurement time is minimized, reducing both contamination and signal drifts. These characteristics are clearly advantageous when compared to commercial micro-spectrophotometers. The MPHIL concept was validated by testing three commercial proteins, lysozyme (HEWL), glucose isomerase (D-xylose-ketol-isomerase, GI) and Aspergillus sp. lipase L (BLL), as well as two proteins expressed and purified for this study, B. cereus formamidase (FASE) and dihydropyrimidinase from S. meliloti CECT41 (DHP). The use of MPHIL is also proposed for any spectrophotometric measurement in the UV-VIS range, as well as for its integration as a concentration measurement platform in more advanced photonic lab on a chip systems.

Graphical abstract: A multiple path photonic lab on a chip for parallel protein concentration measurements

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Nov 2014
Accepted
16 Dec 2014
First published
16 Dec 2014

Lab Chip, 2015,15, 1133-1139

Author version available

A multiple path photonic lab on a chip for parallel protein concentration measurements

I. Rodríguez-Ruiz, M. Conejero-Muriel, T. N. Ackermann, J. A. Gavira and A. Llobera, Lab Chip, 2015, 15, 1133 DOI: 10.1039/C4LC01332H

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