Experimental methods that capture the individual properties of single cells are revealing the key role of cell-to-cell variability in countless biological processes. These single-cell methods are becoming increasingly important across the life sciences in fields such as immunology, regenerative medicine and cancer biology. In addition to high-dimensional transcriptomic techniques such as single-cell RNA sequencing, there is a need for fast, simple and high-throughput assays to enumerate cell samples based on RNA biomarkers. In this work, we present single-cell nucleic acid profiling in droplets (SNAPD) to analyze sets of transcriptional markers in tens of thousands of single mammalian cells. Individual cells are encapsulated in aqueous droplets on a microfluidic chip and the RNA markers in each cell are amplified. Molecular logic circuits then integrate these amplicons to categorize cells based on the transcriptional markers and produce a detectable fluorescence output. SNAPD is capable of analyzing over 100,000 cells per hour and can be used to quantify distinct cell types within heterogeneous populations, detect rare cells at frequencies down to 0.1% and enrich specific cell types using microfluidic sorting. SNAPD provides a simple, rapid, low cost and scalable approach to study complex phenotypes in heterogeneous cell populations.
Experimental methods that capture the individual properties of single cells are revealing the key role of cell-to-cell variability in countless biological processes. These single-cell methods are becoming increasingly important across the life sciences in fields such as immunology, regenerative medicine, and cancer biology. Existing single-cell analysis methods are often limited by their low analysis throughput, their inability to profile high-dimensional phenotypes, and complicated experimental workflows with slow turnaround times. In this work, we present Single-cell Nucleic Acid Profiling in Droplets (SNAPD) to analyze the transcriptional states of hundreds of thousands of single mammalian cells. Individual cells are encapsulated in aqueous droplets on a microfluidic chip and the content of each cell is profiled by amplifying a targeted panel of transcriptional markers. Molecular logic circuits then integrate this multi-dimensional information to categorize cells based on their transcriptional profile and produce a detectable fluorescence output. SNAPD analyzes over 100,000 cells per hour and can be used to quantify distinct cell types within populations, detect rare cells at frequencies down to 0.1%, and enrich specific cell types using microfluidic sorting. SNAPD provides a simple, rapid, low cost, and scalable approach to study complex phenotypes in heterogeneous cell populations.
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