Citation
Rao, A. N.; Vandencasteele, N.; Gamble, L. J.; & Grainger, D. W. (2012).
High-Resolution Epifluorescence and Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry Chemical Imaging Comparisons of Single DNA Microarray Spots.
Anal Chem, 84(24), 10628-10636.
Abstract
DNA microarray assay performance is commonly compromised by spot spot probe and signal variations as well as heterogeneity within printed microspots. Accurate metrics for captured DNA target signal rely upon uniform spot distribution of both probe and target DNA to yield reliable hybridized signal. While often presumed, this is neither easily achieved nor often proven experimentally. High-resolution imaging techniques were used to determine spot heterogeneity in identical DNA array microspots comprising varied ratios of unlabeled and dye-labeled DNA probes contact-printed onto commercial arraying surfaces. Epifluorescence imaging data for individual array microspots were correlated with time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) chemical state imaging of the same spots. Epifluorescence imaging intensity distinguished varying DNA density distributed both within a given spot and from spot to spot. TOF-SIMS chemical analysis confirmed these heterogeneous printed DNA distributions by tracking bound Cy3 dye, DNA base, and phosphate specific ion fragments often correlating to fluorescence patterns within identical spots. TOF-SIMS ion fragments originating from probe DNA and Cy3 dye are enriched in microspot centers, correlating with high fluorescence intensity regions. Both TOF-SIMS and epifluorescence support Marangoni flow effects on spot drying, with high-density DNA-Cy3 located in spot centers and nonhomogeneous DNA distribution within printed spots. Microspot image dimensional analysis results for DNA droplet spreading show differing DNA densities across printed spots. The study directly supports different DNA probe chemical and spatial microenvironments within spots that yield spot-spot signal variations known to affect DNA target hybridization efficiencies and kinetics. These variations critically affect probe-target duplex formation and DNA array signal generation.
Keyword(s)
aggregationcyanine dyesevaporating dropfluorescencehybridization isothermsnucleic-acidsoptimizationphase-separationsurface probe densitytof-sims
Reference Type
Journal Article
Secondary Title
Anal Chem
Author(s)
Rao, A. N.Vandencasteele, N.Gamble, L. J.Grainger, D. W.
Year Published
2012
Date Published
1766016000
Volume Number
84
Issue Number
24
Pages
10628-10636
DOI
Doi 10.1021/Ac3019334