TY - JOUR
T1 - Microfluidic Chip-Based Automatic System for Sequencing Patient-Derived Organoids at the Single-Cell Level
AU - Wu, Xin
AU - Li, Bowen
AU - Wang, Yadong
AU - Xue, Jianchao
AU - Zhao, Huiting
AU - Huang, Zhicheng
AU - Zheng, Zhibo
AU - Liang, Naixin
AU - Wei, Zewen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/10/22
Y1 - 2024/10/22
N2 - Genetically sequencing patient-derived organoids (PDOs) at the single-cell level has emerged as a promising method to infer cell-level heterogeneity of original organs and improve cancer precision medicine. Unfortunately, because of the limited starting quantity and uncontrolled establishing process of PDOs, the existing single-cell sequencing technologies, either manual-operation-based or microfluid-based, are inefficient in processing PDOs originating from clinical tissue samples. To address such issues, this study presents a microfluidic chip-based automatic system for sequencing organoids at the single-cell level, named as MASSO. By performing all required procedures, including PDO establishment/culturing/digesting and single-cell isolation/lysis/whole-genome amplification, in a single microfluidic chip, the possible loss of precious PDO is avoided, and the high quality of on-chip whole-genome amplification of a single PDO cell is ensured. By automating the entire operation process, possible human error is eliminated, and the data repeatability is improved, therefore bridging the technical gap between laboratorial proof-of-concept studies and clinical practices. After characterizing the organoid single-cell whole-genome amplification chip (named as OSA-Chip) and the MASSO, the first successful attempt, to the best of our knowledge, on whole-genome sequencing lung cancer PDO at the single-cell level was performed by MASSO. The results reveal that the MASSO is capable of not only identifying common cancer-related mutations but also discovering specific mutations that affect drug responses, therefore laying the technical foundation for efficiently understanding the cell-level heterogeneities of PDOs and corresponding original organs.
AB - Genetically sequencing patient-derived organoids (PDOs) at the single-cell level has emerged as a promising method to infer cell-level heterogeneity of original organs and improve cancer precision medicine. Unfortunately, because of the limited starting quantity and uncontrolled establishing process of PDOs, the existing single-cell sequencing technologies, either manual-operation-based or microfluid-based, are inefficient in processing PDOs originating from clinical tissue samples. To address such issues, this study presents a microfluidic chip-based automatic system for sequencing organoids at the single-cell level, named as MASSO. By performing all required procedures, including PDO establishment/culturing/digesting and single-cell isolation/lysis/whole-genome amplification, in a single microfluidic chip, the possible loss of precious PDO is avoided, and the high quality of on-chip whole-genome amplification of a single PDO cell is ensured. By automating the entire operation process, possible human error is eliminated, and the data repeatability is improved, therefore bridging the technical gap between laboratorial proof-of-concept studies and clinical practices. After characterizing the organoid single-cell whole-genome amplification chip (named as OSA-Chip) and the MASSO, the first successful attempt, to the best of our knowledge, on whole-genome sequencing lung cancer PDO at the single-cell level was performed by MASSO. The results reveal that the MASSO is capable of not only identifying common cancer-related mutations but also discovering specific mutations that affect drug responses, therefore laying the technical foundation for efficiently understanding the cell-level heterogeneities of PDOs and corresponding original organs.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85206529024&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.analchem.4c05111
DO - 10.1021/acs.analchem.4c05111
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85206529024
SN - 0003-2700
VL - 96
SP - 17027
EP - 17036
JO - Analytical Chemistry
JF - Analytical Chemistry
IS - 42
ER -