Ultrahigh-Throughput
Mammalian Single-Cell Reverse-Transcriptase
Polymerase Chain Reaction in Microfluidic Drops
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Abstract
The behaviors of complex biological
systems are often dictated
by the properties of their heterogeneous and sometimes rare cellular
constituents. Correspondingly, the analysis of individual cells from
a heterogeneous population can reveal information not obtainable by
ensemble measurements. Reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
(RT-PCR) is a widely used method that enables transcriptional profiling
and sequencing analysis on bulk populations of cells. Major barriers
to successfully implementing this technique for mammalian single-cell
studies are the labor, cost, and low-throughput associated with current
approaches. In this report, we describe a novel droplet-based microfluidic
system for performing ∼50000 single-cell RT-PCR reactions in
a single experiment while consuming a minimal amount of reagent. Using
cell type-specific staining and TaqMan RT-PCR probes, we demonstrate
the identification of specific cells from a mixed human cell population.
The throughput, robust detection rate and specificity of this method
makes it well-suited for characterizing large, heterogeneous populations
of cells at the transcriptional level