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January/February 2007

Digital PCR Optimized
Fluidigm’s BioMark digital arrays enable early cancer detection, tailored treatment.

By Laurie Sullivan, Senior Technology Editor

"‘Digital PCR’ has become one of the latest buzz words," says Mike Lucero, EVP of sales & marketing for Fluidigm Corporation. Indeed, the term digital PCR has found its way into the molecular biology literature — a simple PubMed search returns hundreds of items.

"While people have found ways to do digital PCR, they’re all fairly complicated," Lucero contends. In what are known as limiting dilution experiments, samples are appropriately diluted and pipetted into 1,000s of microtiter wells. Only those wells that are positive for the target give a signal. In practice, digital PCR in microwell plates is complex and prone to errors. Also, "The reagents are prohibitively expensive for a 1,000-well experiment at microvolumes," says Lucero. "Further, it’s done at a dilution where each one of the reaction vessels will either have 0 or 1 target molecule."

Fluidigm’s digital array device simplifies the process, making digital PCR easier to perform and more reliable, while using nanovolumes limits cost constraints. "The digital array is a type of integrated fluidic circuit," Lucero explains. "Running the array requires one step." The user loads a mixture of the diluted sample and an analyte-specific reagent for the target of interest. A network of channels and valves partition it into about 1,000 distinct reaction vessels. The array can then be amplified by PCR, making it possible to detect target present in any of the partitions.

Slicing and dicing the mixture effectively enriches the target molecule. After PCR amplification on the array, fluorescent signals for any positives are clearly visible in the chambers. "The ability to assay each of the 1,000 distinct partitions, from an appropriately dilute sample allows you to accurately count how many target molecules are in a sample," says Lucero. In theory, the digital array could be applied to any fluorogenic PCR assay currently done in closed tubes or microwell plates.

Detection of Tumor-Derived DNA as Surrogate for Tumor

Frank McCormick, director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at University of California, San Francisco, uses the Fluidigm digital array to detect mutant DNA in the serum of patients with cancer. Such an application of the technology could enable clinicians to detect disease early, or monitor patient response to therapy.

Typically, tumor cells shed a tiny amount of mutant DNA among an enormous background of normal DNA released from healthy cells, McCormick explained. Being able to detect one mutant within an excessive amount of normal material is technically very difficult, but Fluidigm’s digital array facilitates the process. "Partitioning a sample into thousands of smaller aliquots separates out the proverbial needle in the haystack, making it easier to detect," says McCormick, acknowledging that while it’s too early to say whether the digital array will be used clinically for early detection of disease, it has been shown to work for that purpose.

A second application is for guiding treatment. Gleevec serves as a prominent paradigm: Mutations in the bcr-abl oncogene render patients refractory to the drug. Detecting mutant clones early could be critical in selecting which drugs patients get next. "I believe that [this] application of the technology is more likely than the first to go straight into clinical practice," McCormick notes. Oncology may be the most prominent indication, but the same principle applies to other areas. For example, as with Gleevec, patients can develop resistance and become refractory to their HIV treatments.

McCormick touts the advantages of the Fluidigm digital array over other liquid-handling methods for sample separation. "The sample size is tiny, material is accurately distributed, plus the PCR reaction can be measured in real time," McCormick notes. Each step in the process could be done in a clunky way using different technology, but "this streamlines distribution, amplification, and sensitive detection, on one system."

"Digital arrays may be a novel approach to catching disease early," McCormick concludes. "And detecting DNA mutations may be the most specific way to do that for cancer."

 

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