Digital microfluidics as an emerging tool for bacterial protocols

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Abstract

Bacteria are widely studied in various research areas, including synthetic biology, sequencing and diagnostic testing. Protocols involving bacteria are often multistep, cumbersome and require access to a long list of instruments to perform experiments. In order to streamline these processes, the fluid handling technique digital microfluidics (DMF) has provided a miniaturized platform to perform various steps of bacterial protocols from sample preparation to analysis. DMF devices can be paired/interfaced with instrumentation such as microscopes, plate readers, and incubators, demonstrating their versatility with existing research tools. Alternatively, DMF instruments can be integrated into all-in-one packages with on-chip magnetic separation for sample preparation, heating/cooling modules to perform assay steps and cameras for absorbance and/or fluorescence measurements. This perspective outlines the beneficial features DMF offers to bacterial protocols, highlights limitations of current work and proposes future directions for this tool’s expansion in the field.

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Nemr, C. R., Sklavounos, A. A., Wheeler, A. R., & Kelley, S. O. (2023). Digital microfluidics as an emerging tool for bacterial protocols. SLAS Technology, 28(1), 2–15. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.slast.2022.10.001

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