TY - JOUR
T1 - Rapid Single-Cell Proteomics Using Nanoconfined Enzyme Reactors on a Microscale Digital Microfluidics Platform
AU - Zhao, Menglei
AU - Li, Hang
AU - Guo, Zongliang
AU - Liu, Haobing
AU - Peng, Jiaxi
AU - Hu, Yechen
AU - Fu, Bin
AU - Li, Boyu
AU - Guo, Liyuan
AU - Fu, Rongxin
AU - Lu, Yao
AU - Song, Pengfei
AU - Xu, Wei
AU - Vertes, Akos
AU - Xie, Huikai
AU - Zhang, Shuailong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Multicellular organisms exhibit cellular heterogeneity, crucial for understanding physiological and pathological processes. Single-cell proteomics (SCP) enables exploration of this diversity but faces challenges such as sample loss due to nonspecific adsorption and relies on free protease solutions for enzymatic digestion. Here, a microfluidic platform is reported that enhances proteomic analysis of single cells by integrating nanoconfined enzyme reactors with digital microfluidics (DMF). Trypsin immobilized on NHS-activated magnetic beads via click chemistry (Try@Fe3O4) shows improved stability and enzyme loading, reducing autolysis risks. Using DMF-Try@Fe3O4, it achieves over twice the sequence coverage and four times the peptide matches for standard proteins in 10 min compared to conventional 10-h methods. The densely packed enzymes in the nanoscale microenvironment enhance reaction rates. This system identifies 3,916 and 1,849 protein groups from 50 HeLa cells and single cells, respectively, showing 27% and 201% increases over tube digestion. The platform also classifies leukocyte subtypes (HL-60, Jurkat, and Raji, with N = 20 for each) with SCP and identifies key upregulated proteins. Proteomic analysis of gemcitabine-treated PANC-1 cells reveal alterations consistent with known drug mechanisms. This approach enhances protein digestion efficiency and identification rates, offering a rapid, automated SCP solution for high-throughput applications and broader biological investigations.
AB - Multicellular organisms exhibit cellular heterogeneity, crucial for understanding physiological and pathological processes. Single-cell proteomics (SCP) enables exploration of this diversity but faces challenges such as sample loss due to nonspecific adsorption and relies on free protease solutions for enzymatic digestion. Here, a microfluidic platform is reported that enhances proteomic analysis of single cells by integrating nanoconfined enzyme reactors with digital microfluidics (DMF). Trypsin immobilized on NHS-activated magnetic beads via click chemistry (Try@Fe3O4) shows improved stability and enzyme loading, reducing autolysis risks. Using DMF-Try@Fe3O4, it achieves over twice the sequence coverage and four times the peptide matches for standard proteins in 10 min compared to conventional 10-h methods. The densely packed enzymes in the nanoscale microenvironment enhance reaction rates. This system identifies 3,916 and 1,849 protein groups from 50 HeLa cells and single cells, respectively, showing 27% and 201% increases over tube digestion. The platform also classifies leukocyte subtypes (HL-60, Jurkat, and Raji, with N = 20 for each) with SCP and identifies key upregulated proteins. Proteomic analysis of gemcitabine-treated PANC-1 cells reveal alterations consistent with known drug mechanisms. This approach enhances protein digestion efficiency and identification rates, offering a rapid, automated SCP solution for high-throughput applications and broader biological investigations.
KW - digital microfluidics
KW - immobilized enzyme
KW - mass spectrometry analysis
KW - single-cell proteomics
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105015314608
U2 - 10.1002/adfm.202502142
DO - 10.1002/adfm.202502142
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105015314608
SN - 1616-301X
JO - Advanced Functional Materials
JF - Advanced Functional Materials
ER -