The
label-free and sensitive detection of synthesis products from
single microbial cells remains the bottleneck for determining the
specific turnover numbers of individual whole-cell biocatalysts. We
demonstrate the detection of lysine synthesized by only a few living
cells in microfluidic droplets via mass spectrometry. Biocatalyst
turnover numbers were analyzed using rationally designed reaction
environments compatible with mass spectrometry, which were decoupled
from cell growth and showed high specific turnover rates (∼1
fmol/(cell h)), high conversion yields (25%), and long-term catalyst
stability (>14h). The heterogeneity of the cellular reactivity
of
only 15 ± 5 single biocatalysts per droplet could be demonstrated
for the first time by parallelizing the droplet incubation. These
results enable the resolution of biocatalysis beyond averages of populations.
This is a key step toward quantifying specific reactivities of single
cells as minimal functional catalytic units.
We introduce the coupling of droplet microfluidics and ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) to address the challenges of label-free and chemical-specific detection of compounds in individual droplets. In analogy to the established use of mass spectrometry, droplet−IMS coupling can be also achieved via electrospray ionization but with significantly less instrumental effort. Because IMS instruments do not require high-vacuum systems, they are very compact, cost-effective, and robust, making them an ideal candidate as a chemical-specific end-of-line detector for segmented flow experiments. Herein, we demonstrate the successful coupling of droplet microfluidics with a custom-built high-resolution drift tube IMS system for monitoring chemical reactions in nL-sized droplets in an oil phase. The analytes contained in each droplet were assigned according to their characteristic ion mobility with limit of detections down to 200 nM to 1 μM and droplet frequencies ranging from 0.1 to 0.5 Hz. Using a custom sheath flow electrospray interface, we have further achieved the chemical-specific monitoring of a biochemical transformation catalyzed by a few hundred yeast cells, at single droplet level.
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