A microfabricated device with sealable femtoliter-volume reaction chambers is described. This report includes a protocol for sealing cell-free protein synthesis reactants inside these chambers for the purpose of understanding the role of crowding and confinement in gene expression.
Cell-free systems provide a flexible platform for probing specific networks of biological reactions isolated from the complex resource sharing (e.g., global gene expression, cell division) encountered within living cells. However, such systems, used in conventional macro-scale bulk reactors, often fail to exhibit the dynamic behaviors and efficiencies characteristic of their living micro-scale counterparts. Understanding the impact of internal cell structure and scale on reaction dynamics is crucial to understanding complex gene networks. Here we report a microfabricated device that confines cell-free reactions in cellular scale volumes while allowing flexible characterization of the enclosed molecular system. This multilayered poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) device contains femtoliter-scale reaction chambers on an elastomeric membrane which can be actuated (open and closed). When actuated, the chambers confine Cell-Free Protein Synthesis (CFPS) reactions expressing a fluorescent protein, allowing for the visualization of the reaction kinetics over time using time-lapse fluorescent microscopy. Here we demonstrate how this device may be used to measure the noise structure of CFPS reactions in a manner that is directly analogous to those used to characterize cellular systems, thereby enabling the use of noise biology techniques used in cellular systems to characterize CFPS gene circuits and their interactions with the cell-free environment.
Cell-free systems offer a simplified and flexible platform for viewing biological reactions free from complicating factors such as fitness, division, and mutation that are unavoidable in the study of living cells. Such approaches have been employed to study cellular systems including the characterization of membrane proteins1, the probing of protein interactions2, and the exploration of fundamental aspects of translation3-7. Recently cell-free systems have begun to gain a foothold as viable platforms for synthetic biology8-10. The appeal of such approaches is that they free synthetic biology from the resource sharing and ‘extrinsic noise’ that affects reaction dynamics in living cells. However questions remain as to how the physical environment in which cell-free reactions are embedded affects the progression and outcome of the reaction. Cell-free reaction environments — particularly confined environments that approach cell-relevant volumes — remain poorly characterized. Cell-Free Protein Synthesis (CFPS) is conventionally thought of as being ‘scale-free,’ exhibiting equivalent kinetics across a range of microliter to liter-scale reaction volumes11. Nonetheless, confining reactions to cellular scale volumes has been shown to significantly affect protein expression rates12.
The stochastic nature of cell-free reactions — especially as these systems approach or even go below femtoliter volumes — may be of particular importance. Noise in gene expression is a property greatly influenced by confinement as small cell volumes and high densities of components force many of the important molecules to very low population levels — for example, Escherichia coli confines within a 1 fl volume as many as 4,300 different polypeptides under the inducible control of several hundred different promoters13. This inherent noise has been implicated as a central driving force in numerous biological processes including chemotaxis14, the HIV decision between active replication and latency15, the λ phage decision between lysis and lysogeny16,17, and the Bacillus subtillus decision between competence and sporulation17. Cell-free synthetic biology then provides both an opportunity to explore the stochastic properties of cellular gene circuits and networks, and manipulate these behaviors to achieve specific technological goals. While the noise behavior of cellular systems has been well-studied18-27, there has been little exploration of the fundamental noise behavior of cell-free systems8, particularly at the cellular scale.
Here we present a platform for the study of stochastic effects in cell-free synthetic biology. This microfabricated platform contains femtoliter-scale reaction chambers which may be quickly transitioned between open (free diffusion in and out of the chamber) and closed (reactants confined within the chamber) states. In the closed state, we confine Cell-Free Protein Synthesis (CFPS) reactants expressing a green fluorescent protein (GFP), and follow gene expression using time-lapse fluorescence microscopy28 (Figure 1). We characterize this cell-free environment by measuring the structure of the stochastic fluctuations in gene expression in a manner directly analogous to those used to characterize cells25. Non-microfabrication methods for confining cell-free reactions include vesicles and liposomes29-32, water-in-oil emulsions12, and porous media33. However, while these methods can provide control over the size distribution of the confined volumes34, microfabrication methods create highly replicable features with tightly specified dimensions, even on the nanoscale. Moreover, these rigid structures can be easily tracked over time without being susceptible to evaporation or changes in the external environment. Microfabricated container designs used in previous work8,35 cannot quickly seal the reaction chambers following reaction initiation, complicating the clear assignment of the time when the reaction was initiated (time zero). Using the method presented here, only 4-5 min are needed between initiation and visualization of the reaction on the device, thereby providing a well-defined “time zero”. The following protocols describe the methods for fabricating and testing this device, including optical lithography, device assembly, device testing, and methods for image analysis.
1. Optical Lithography of Device Masters
2. PDMS Device Fabrication
3. Experimental Setup for Cell-free Protein Synthesis Reaction
4. Image Analysis and Data Processing
The distinct advantage of this microfabricated platform is in the application of the controllable elastomeric “control valve” which is independently actuated in order to confine CFPS reactions (Figure 2A). When the device is actuated, the membrane chambers are pressed against the glass slide to confine fluorescent reagents into an array of reaction chambers (Figure 2C). In order to verify that the chambers reliably confine the reaction through the duration of the experiment, a basic FRAP (Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching) test was conducted37. A fluorophore (AF 555) was applied to the device, and the control valve was actuated; using the shutter aperture of the microscope, a single well confining the fluorophore was isolated and photobleached individually (Figure 2D). The chosen well became dark and did not recover in brightness until the control valve was depressurized 20 min later, releasing the chamber from the glass. This test verifies that these reaction chambers remain well-sealed for the duration of the experiment.
In optimal conditions, a CFPS reaction expressing an easily visualized protein (such as GFP or Luciferase) expresses detectable protein within a few minutes of being applied to this device. Over the lifetime of the reaction, protein synthesis in the interior and exterior of the reaction chambers is imaged and quantified by measuring units of fluorescence intensity within each chamber (Figure 3A). Fluorescence intensity, corresponding to protein concentration, may be mapped over time for each reaction chamber (Figure 3D).
Gene expression is an inherently stochastic process that introduces fluctuations (noise) at every molecular step (synthesis, degradation, protein-DNA binding, etc.)20. One branch of noise biology focuses on the probative value of gene circuit noise41 . Expression in cell-free systems will have extrinsic noise effects that arise from interactions between the molecular machinery of expression and the surfaces that define the boundaries of the reaction vessels. These extrinsic effects will likely become more pronounced as cell-free reactions are confined into even smaller reaction chambers. The ability to perform time-lapse imaging of multiple confined CFPS reactions then enables the careful analysis of noise structure (magnitude and dynamics) in confined cell-free systems in a way directly analogous to methods that have been reported for cellular systems25. Figure 3C and 3D show the time courses of constitutive GFP expression from a T7 promoter in a standard 384-well microplate with a well volume of 15 µl, compared to in PDMS reaction chambers 10 µm in diameter, corresponding to volumes of only about 300 fl, about seven orders of magnitude less. The variability in protein expression rates in the 10 µm reaction chambers is much higher than in the well-plate measurements, approaching those seen in cells.
Multiplexed reactions performed on the device exhibit similar kinetics to CFPS reactions performed in bulk on a microplate reader (Figure 3B), where there is a swift increase in fluorescence which plateaus, often assumed to be caused by resource limitation within the reaction volume42,43. This deterministic growth behavior, though fluctuating, is generally consistent across all reaction chambers, and between experiments — by averaging traces between chambers across experiments, the deterministic trend may be subtracted from trace values, leaving only the noise components of the reaction (Figure 4A). Figure 4B shows the GFP expression noise after removal of the deterministic, transient component (top), and the autocorrelation of the noise (bottom), while Figure 4A shows the corresponding traces in the 10 µm reaction chambers. The distribution in the half-times of the autocorrelation traces gives the frequency dependence of the noise while the zero lag time of the autocorrelation traces gives the magnitudes of the noise, as the variance.
Figure 1. Cell-Free Protein Synthesis reactants are confined in femtoliter scale reaction chambers for the purpose of measuring gene expression noise. Reactants from a commercial cell-free protein expression system are used to constitutively express GFP inside confined PDMS reaction chambers. An array of these chambers may be visualized with time-lapse fluorescence microscopy in order to characterize protein expression and gene expression noise. The fluorescence intensity of each reaction chamber over time may be plotted as an individual trace. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Fabrication of two-layer microfluidic device with sealable femtoliter-scale chambers. (A) Layout and exploded view of device layers. The device is composed of two PDMS layers and a glass coverslip. The PDMS membrane, sealed between the glass and control valve layers, holds the reaction chambers. (B) SEM image of PDMS reaction chamber. The interior diameter is 10 µm. (C) Schematic of input channels in device. Cell-Free Protein Synthesis (CFPS) reagents are flown through the reaction channel. Water is pressurized in the control valve to compress the reaction chambers against the glass slide, sealing the chambers37. Reproduced from Ref. 37 with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry. (D) Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP) test on a single well using FITC indicates chamber is well-sealed against external environment. The fluorophore was captured in the chambers (upper image) and a single well was photobleached (lower image). No fluorescence recovery was seen in the photobleached chamber until the control valve was released. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. EGFP Expression in Confined Cell-Free Reaction. (A) Fluorescence images of sealed reaction chambers at chosen time points in the reaction. Protein production can be seen both inside the reaction chambers and outside the chambers in the main channel. (B) EGFP was cloned into a Pet3a vector, providing a T7 polymerase promoter and terminator and a strong ribosome binding site (RBS). (C) Normalized fluorescence measurements of constitutive expression of EGFP in a bulk cell-free reaction performed in a microplate reader. CFPS reactions usually produce protein quickly before slowing to a 'steady state' fluorescence — this is associated with resource limitation43. Black dashes indicate the average trace. (D) Normalized fluorescence of 51 raw fluorescence intensity traces read from 51 reaction chambers over several experiments. Black dashes indicate the average trace over several experiments, which illustrate the deterministic component of the protein expression. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Individual Noise Traces and Noise Autocorrelation of a Cellular and Cell-Free System. (A) From Austin et al., 2006. Noise in GFP expression (top) and normalized autocorrelation functions (bottom) acquired from tracking GFP production in living bacteria25. Reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: [Nature] 25 (Vol. 439), copyright (2006). (B) Noise in GFP expression (top) and normalized autocorrelation functions (bottom) acquired from GFP production in cell-free system, tracked in microfluidic device reaction chambers. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Gene expression in cells is inherently noisy due to small cellular volumes and low copy numbers of important reactants. Noise biology often focuses on the sources, processing, and biological consequences of fluctuations in the populations, concentrations, positions, or states of molecules that control gene circuits and networks44. The vast majority of this work has been performed in cellular systems, which has the advantage of viewing the noise of a gene circuit within the natural context of the genetic networks within the cell. However, cell-free systems allow the characterization of the intrinsic fluctuations of an individual gene circuit without the confounding extrinsic effects18 that cannot be avoided in cellular systems. Analysis of noise can offer important physical insights into how genetic circuits are structured and how they function, and has been used in cellular systems to characterize negative25 and positive27 autoregulation, extrinsic and intrinsic contributions to expression noise18 , and transcriptional bursting45,46. Here we describe the study of a cell-free expression system in microfluidic devices that enable the simultaneous control of reactor size and reaction initiation times, in order to better understand the roles that confinement and crowding47,48 have on intrinsic protein expression noise without the complications associated with living cells.
The key enabling feature of the design is the integration of arrays of femtoliter-volume (micron-scale) reaction chambers used for confining the reactants of a cell-free protein expression system, with an elastomeric “control valve” membrane in PDMS that traps the reactants at a well-defined, “time zero” for reaction initiation (Figure 1). This control allows the kinetics of the reactions involved in protein synthesis to be followed in real time with high precision. As such, it is important to manage cell-free reactants so that inter-experimental variability is minimized as much as possible. This control allows us to evaluate noise structure of cell-free genetic circuits in a manner that is analogous to techniques previously used to evaluate gene expression in living cells.
As reactants used in CFPS systems can be sensitive to freeze-thaw cycles, it is important to keep the reactants cold and minimize the time the reactants spend thawing on ice. It is good practice to periodically test the expression of the CFPS system in bulk in order to identify changes in expression levels over time — this may be done in a 10-15 µl reaction in an Eppendorf tube, or in a device like a microplate reader, which performs multiple reads over time to capture reaction kinetics. Noting the age and thaw times of the reactants for every experiment will help when troubleshooting low expression levels. Furthermore, when assembling CFPS reagents, it is important to note that the reaction will begin once it is fully assembled and removed from the ice. In order to maintain a consistent “time zero”, it is helpful to record the time following the initiation of the CFPS reaction after the final addition of the DNA input, and to apply the reaction as quickly as possible to the incubated device. This process should take about 4-5 min, and fluorescence should not yet be visible within the reaction chambers. This control assures that the time available to visualize the growth portion of the reaction curve is maximized.
Before running CFPS reactions on the device, it is advisable to run quality-control tests to verify there is no leakage from the chambers. A FRAP test can be performed (as in Figure 2D) by applying a fluorophore to the device and exposing an individual well until the well is completely bleached. If the chambers are well-sealed, no recovery should be visible inside the well — there should be a stark contrast between the walls of the compartment and the interior and exterior spaces. If fluorescence recovery is apparent or the walls of the reaction chamber are not well defined, the pressure on the control valve should be increased or the device should be checked for leakage or delamination from the glass slide.
This protocol has been tested with CFPS reagents from a commercial E. coli cell-free protein expression kit (scaled to 25 µl), though other robust CFPS systems may be used. It is possible to use volumes much lower than 25 µl when applying reactions to the device, which may be helpful when reagent cost is a limiting factor in experiments. Once reactants are added to the device and the reaction chambers are sealed, it is not possible to add reactants to the solution without de-actuating the control valve — thus this device is not suitable for reactions which require the addition of reagents during the course of the reaction. This device is also not optimized for observing CFPS reactions which may run longer than 3 hr — the effects of dehydration and drying of the device after this time period have not been evaluated. If longer reaction times are desired, these effects may be mitigated by sealing the device to prevent evaporation, changing the incubation temperature, or by using a humidity chamber. Modifications to the device design, such as nanoporous structures in the chamber walls49,50 or the inclusion of a porous membrane layer, represent a few methods which could allow reagent exchange and thus lengthen reaction timescales.
Microfabricated reaction compartments of uniform volume are valuable for maintaining consistent dimensions across experiments and highly suitable for investigation into “side reactions” with the compartment walls. Unlike methods using non-microfabricated techniques, these reactions must be evaluated in small numbers, and do not provide dimensional flexibility during experiments. However, the controllable design for these reaction chambers is highly suitable for time-lapse microscopy, and may be an illuminating complement to a high-throughput method of confinement.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank Dr. Mitch Doktycz, Dr. Jennifer Morrel-Falvey, Dr. Amber Bible, and Dr. Brandon Razooky for helpful advice and conversations, and acknowledge Dr. Sukanya Iyer for constructing the Pet3a-EGFP plasmid used in the gene expression tests. We acknowledge support from the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, which is sponsored by the Scientific User Facilities Division, Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy. SEN and PMC acknowledge support from Bredesen Center Fellowships at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. This research was performed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). ORNL is managed by UT-Battelle, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy.
Name of Material/ Equipment | Company | Catalog Number | Comments/Description |
SU-8 2015 | Microchem | SU-8 2000 series | Toxic. Handle with care. Wear chemical goggles, chemical gloves and suitable protective clothing when handling SU-8 2000 resists. Do not get into eyes, or onto skin or clothing. |
SU-8 Thinner | Microchem | SU-8 2000 series | Handle with care. Wear chemical goggles, chemical gloves and suitable protective clothing when handling SU-8 2000 resists. Do not get into eyes, or onto skin or clothing. |
SU-8 Developer | Microchem | SU-8 2000 series | Handle with care. Wear chemical goggles, chemical gloves and suitable protective clothing when handling SU-8 2000 resists. Do not get into eyes, or onto skin or clothing. |
Chlorotrimethylsilane | Sigma Aldrich | 92360 FLUKA | Hazardous. Corrosive to the respiratory tract., Reacts violently with water. |
Sylgard 184 PDMS | Dow Corning | SYLGARD 184 | |
0.75 mm hole-puncher | Ted Pella Inc. | 15072 | Harris Uni-Core |
23 ga needles blunt tip | Component Supply Co. | /NE-231PL-25 | |
#0 glass coverslip | Ted Pella Inc. | 260366 | Gold Seal |
Plasma Cleaner | Harrick Plasma | PDC-001 | |
Microscope | Nikon Instruments | Eclipse TE 300 | |
CCD camera | Roper Scientific | CoolSNAP-HQ | |
Shutter | Shutter Insturment | Lambda SC | |
Light Source | Nikon | Intensilight C-HGFI | |
Color Filters | Chroma Technology Corp. | ZET 532/106 excitation, ZT 532rdc dichroic, ET 595/50m emission | |
100x oil-immersion objective | Nikon | N.A. 1.4 | |
Temperature Regulator | Oko Lab | H201-T | |
Metamorph | Universal Imaging Corp. | Version 7.8.3.0 | |
Marsh Bellofram transducers | Marsh Bellofram | T2000 | |
24 gauge PTFE tubing | Component Supply Co. | /SWTT-24-C | |
Septum vials | National Scientific | C4015- 17W | |
Power Supply | Hewlett Packard | 6205B Dual DC Power Supply | |
sharp 23 ga needles | Precision Glide | 305129 | |
Male-to-male luer lock adapters | Qosina | 20024 | Polycarbonate |
Stainless Steel Blunt Needle 23 Ga. | Component Supply Co. | /NE-232PL-5C | Polypropylene |
S30 E coli protein expression system | Promega | L1110 | |
Pet3a-GFP vector/protein | Novagen | 69418-3 | Assembled in-house. Inserted EGFP gene in Pet3a. |
Quantum Prep Plasmid Midiprep Kit | Biorad | #732-6120 | |
QIAquick PCR Purification Kit | Qiagen | 28106 | |
Kimwipes | Kimberly-Clark | 34155 | |
Alexafluor 555 | Molecular Probes | AF555 | http://www.lifetechnologies.com |
ImageJ | National Institutes of Health (NIH) | Version 1.46r | |
Plugin: Time Series Analyzer | Balaji J Dept. of Neurobiology, UCLA | Version 3.0 | |
Plugin: StackReg/TurboReg | Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne Biomedical Imaging Group | Distribution is dated July 7, 2011 | |
Plugin: ROI Manager Tools | Tiago Ferreira | 12/15/2013 Version |