Alleviating Cell Lysate-Induced Inhibition to Enable RT-PCR from Single Cells in Picoliter-Volume Double Emulsion Droplets

Anal Chem. 2023 Jan 17;95(2):935-945. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c03475. Epub 2023 Jan 4.

Abstract

Microfluidic droplet assays enable single-cell polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequencing analyses at unprecedented scales, with most methods encapsulating cells within nanoliter-sized single emulsion droplets (water-in-oil). Encapsulating cells within picoliter double emulsion (DE) (water-in-oil-in-water) allows sorting droplets with commercially available fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) machines, making it possible to isolate single cells based on phenotypes of interest for downstream analyses. However, sorting DE droplets with standard cytometers requires small droplets that can pass FACS nozzles. This poses challenges for molecular biology, as prior reports suggest that reverse transcription (RT) and PCR amplification cannot proceed efficiently at volumes below 1 nL due to cell lysate-induced inhibition. To overcome this limitation, we used a plate-based RT-PCR assay designed to mimic reactions in picoliter droplets to systematically quantify and ameliorate the inhibition. We find that RT-PCR is blocked by lysate-induced cleavage of nucleic acid probes and primers, which can be efficiently alleviated through heat lysis. We further show that the magnitude of inhibition depends on the cell type, but that RT-PCR can proceed in low-picoscale reaction volumes for most mouse and human cell lines tested. Finally, we demonstrate one-step RT-PCR from single cells in 20 pL DE droplets with fluorescence quantifiable via FACS. These results open up new avenues for improving picoscale droplet RT-PCR reactions and expanding microfluidic droplet-based single-cell analysis technologies.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • DNA Primers
  • Emulsions
  • Humans
  • Mice
  • Microfluidic Analytical Techniques*
  • Microfluidics* / methods
  • Polymerase Chain Reaction / methods
  • Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction

Substances

  • Emulsions
  • DNA Primers