Synergetic collision and space separation in microfluidic chip for efficient affinity-discriminated molecular selection

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Abstract

Efficient molecular selection is a prerequisite for generating molecular tools used in diagnosis, pathology, vaccinology, and therapeutics. Selection efficiency is thermodynamically highly dependent on the dissociation equilibrium that can be reached in a single round. Extreme shifting of equilibrium towards dissociation favors the retention of high-affinity ligands over those with lower affinity, thus improving the selection efficiency. We propose to synergize dual effects by deterministic lateral-displacement microfluidics, including the collision-based force effect and the two-dimensional (2D) separation-based concentration effect, to greatly shift the equilibrium. Compared with previous approaches, this system can remove more low- or moderate-affinity ligands and maintain most high-affinity ligands, thereby improving affinity discrimination in selection. This strategy is demonstrated on phage display in both experiment and simulation, and two peptides against tumor markers ephrin type-A receptor 2 (EphA2) and CD71 were obtained with high affinity and specificity within a single round of selection, which offers a promising direction for discovery of robust binding ligands for a wide range of biomedical applications.

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Wang, J., Li, L., Zhang, Y., Zhao, K., Chen, X., Shen, H., … Zhu, Z. (2022). Synergetic collision and space separation in microfluidic chip for efficient affinity-discriminated molecular selection. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(41). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2211538119

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