Isolation, incubation, and parallel functional testing and identification by FISH of rare microbial single-copy cells from multi-species mixtures using the combination of chemistrode and stochastic confinement
Abstract
This paper illustrates a plug-based microfluidic approach combining the technique of the chemistrode and the principle of stochastic confinement, which can be used to i) starting from a mixture of cells, stochastically isolate single cells into plugs, ii) incubate the plugs to grow clones of the individual cells without competition among different clones, iii) split the plugs into arrays of identical daughter plugs, where each plug contained clones of the original cell, and iv) analyze each array by an independent technique, including cellulase assays, cultivation, cryo-preservation, Gram staining, and Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH). Functionally, this approach is equivalent to simultaneously assaying the clonal daughter cells by multiple killing and non-killing methods. A new protocol for single-cell FISH, a killing method, was developed to identify isolated cells of Paenibacillus curdlanolyticus in one array of daughter plugs using a 16S rRNA probe, Pc196. At the same time, live copies of P. curdlanolyticus in another array were obtained for cultivation. Among technical advances, this paper reports a chemistrode that enables sampling of nanoliter volumes directly from environmental specimens, such as soil slurries. In addition, a method for analyzing plugs is described: an array of droplets is deposited on the surface, and individual plugs are injected into the droplets of the surface array to induce a reaction and enable microscopy without distortions associated with curvature of plugs. The overall approach is attractive for identifying rare, slow growing microorganisms and would complement current methods to cultivate unculturable microbes from environmental samples.
Additional Information
© Royal Society of Chemistry 2009. Received 11th March 2009, Accepted 1st May 2009. First published on the web 14th May 2009. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health Director's Pioneer Award 1DP1OD003584. We thank Mitchell L. Sogin for helpful discussions, Jessica Mark Welch and Gary Borisy for advice on FISH, Delai Chen for advice on the chemistrode, and Elizabeth B. Haney for contributions to writing and editing this manuscript.Attached Files
Published - Ismagilov_LOC_2009_Isolating_Splitting_9_2153_2162_WL.pdf
Accepted Version - nihms125087.pdf
Supplemental Material - Ismagilov_LOC_2009_Isolating_Splitting_9_2153_2162_WL_supp_info.pdf
Files
Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC2719823
- Eprint ID
- 40828
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20130821-160724539
- NIH
- 1DP1 OD003584
- Created
-
2013-08-26Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2023-06-02Created from EPrint's last_modified field