Issue 11, 2007

Total nucleic acid analysis integrated on microfluidic devices

Abstract

The design and integration of microfluidic devices for on-chip amplification of nucleic acids from various biological samples has undergone extensive development. The actual benefit to the biological community is far from clear, with a growing, but limited, number of application successes in terms of a full on-chip integrated analysis. Several advances have been made, particularly with the integration of amplification and detection, where amplification is most often the polymerase chain reaction. Full integration including sample preparation remains a major obstacle for achieving a quantitative analysis. We review the recently described devices incorporating in vitro gene amplification and compare devices relative to each other and in terms of fully achieving a miniaturised total analysis system (μ-TAS).

Graphical abstract: Total nucleic acid analysis integrated on microfluidic devices

Article information

Article type
Critical Review
Submitted
01 Jun 2007
Accepted
12 Jul 2007
First published
09 Aug 2007

Lab Chip, 2007,7, 1413-1423

Total nucleic acid analysis integrated on microfluidic devices

L. Chen, A. Manz and P. J. R. Day, Lab Chip, 2007, 7, 1413 DOI: 10.1039/B708362A

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