Accelerating Cleavage Activity of CRISPR-Cas13 System on a Microfluidic Chip for Rapid Detection of RNA

Jongmin Kim, Ajymurat Orozaliev, Sarah Sahloul, Anh Duc Van, Van Truong Dang, Van Sang Pham, Yujeong Oh, Ibrahim Chehade, Mohamed Al-Sayegh, Yong Ak Song

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

It is extremely advantageous to detect nucleic acid levels in the early phases of disease management; such early detection facilitates timely treatment, and it can prevent altogether certain cancers and infectious diseases. A simple, rapid, and versatile detection platform without enzymatic amplification for both short and long sequences would be highly desirable in this regard. Our study addresses this need by introducing IMACC, an ICP-based Microfluidic Accelerator Combined with CRISPR, for amplification-free nucleic acid detection. It exploits electrokinetically induced ion concentration polarization (ICP) to concentrate target nucleic acids and CRISPR reagents near the depletion zone boundary within a microfluidic channel. This localized accumulation accelerates the CRISPR-guided promiscuous cleavage of reporter molecules while enhancing their fluorescence signals simultaneously. Simultaneous accumulation of RNA and ribonucleoproteins (RNP) in confined spaces was validated experimentally and numerically, showing overlapping regions. IMACC enabled detection of miRNA-21 (22 bp) down to 10 pM within 2 min of ICP. IMACC ensured CRISPR specificity (single mismatch (N = 1) sensitivity) during ICP, as shown by off-target and mismatch sequence experiments. IMACC was applied to long RNA samples (i.e., SARS-CoV-2), but it statistically remained challenging at this point due to nonlinear intensity trends with copy numbers and large deviations. IMACC enabled rapid detection of short RNAs such as microRNAs using only basic CRISPR reagents in a single microfluidic channel, eliminating the need for extra enzymes or buffer sets, streamlining workflow and reducing turnaround time. IMACC has the potential to advance CRISPR diagnostics and holds promise for improved detection and future prescreening applications.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)9858-9865
Number of pages8
JournalAnalytical Chemistry
Volume97
Issue number18
DOIs
StatePublished - May 13 2025

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Analytical Chemistry

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