Free-Flow Biomolecular Concentration and Separation of Proteins and Nucleic Acids Using Teíchophoresis

24 Pages Posted: 5 Oct 2022

See all articles by Steven Doria

Steven Doria

Texas A&M University

Jarad Yost

Texas A&M University

Zachary Gagnon

Texas A&M University - Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering

Abstract

The ability to preconcentrate, separate, and purify biomolecules, such as proteins and nucleic acids, is an important requirement for the next generation of portable diagnostic tools for environmental monitoring and disease detection. Traditionally, such pretreatment has been accomplished using large, centralized liquid- or solid-phase extraction equipment, which can be time-consuming and requires many processing steps. Here, we present a newly developed electrokinetic concentration technique, teíchophoresis (TPE), to concentrate and separate proteins, and to concentrate nucleic acids. In TPE, a free-flowing sample is exposed to a perpendicular electric field in the vicinity of a mass-impermeable conductive wall and a conductive terminating electrolyte (TE), which creates a high electric field strength zone between the lower mobility sample and the no-flux barrier. Unlike a similar electrokinetic concentration method, isotachophoresis (ITP), TPE does require a leading electrolyte (LE), yet still enables a continuous field-driven electrophoretic ion migration across the channel and a free-flowing biomolecular concentration at the conductive wall. Here, we demonstrate the use of free-flow TPE (FFTPE) to manipulate biomolecular samples containing proteins or nucleic acids. We first use TPE to drive a 6.6-fold concentration increase of avidin-FITC, and also demonstrate protein separation and stacking between ovalbumin-FITC and BSA-rhodamine, both without the use of a conventional LE. Further, we utilize TPE to perform a 21-fold concentration increase of nucleic acids. Our results show that TPE is biocompatible with both proteins and nucleic acids, requires only 10 V DC, produces no significant sample pH changes during operation, and demonstrates that this method can be used as an effective sample pretreatment to prepare biological samples for downstream analysis in a continuous free-flowing microfluidic channel.

Keywords: Electrophoresis, Teíchophoresis, Electric Fields, Proteins, Nucleic Acids

Suggested Citation

Doria, Steven and Yost, Jarad and Gagnon, Zachary, Free-Flow Biomolecular Concentration and Separation of Proteins and Nucleic Acids Using Teíchophoresis. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4238375 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4238375

Steven Doria

Texas A&M University ( email )

Jarad Yost

Texas A&M University ( email )

Zachary Gagnon (Contact Author)

Texas A&M University - Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering ( email )

College Station, TX
United States

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