Droplet microfluidics has become a very powerful tool in high-throughput screening, including antibody discovery. Screens are usually carried out by physically sorting droplets hosting cells of the desired phenotype, breaking them, recovering the encapsulated cells, and sequencing the paired antibody light and heavy chain genes at the single-cell level. This series of multiple consecutive manipulation steps of rare screening hits is complex and challenging, resulting in a significant loss of clones with the desired phenotype or large fractions of cells with incomplete antibody information. Here, we present fluorescence-activated droplet sequencing, in which droplets showing the desired phenotype are selectively picoinjected with reagents for RT-PCR. Subsequently, light and heavy chain genes are natively paired, fused into a single-chain fragment variant format, and amplified before off-chip transfer and downstream nanopore sequencing. This workflow is sufficiently sensitive for obtaining different paired full-length antibody sequences from as little as five droplets, fulfilling the desired phenotype. Replacing physical sorting by specific sequencing overcomes a general bottleneck in droplet microfluidic screening and should be compatible with many more applications.
Keywords: antibodies; droplet microfluidics; heavy and light chain pairing; single-cell and droplet sorting.