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Applied Biosystems, Eagle Research and Development Double Up for Single-Molecule Detection
By Laurie Sullivan

Applied Biosystems and Eagle are co-developing a device for single-molecule detection. The device, invented by Eagle, identifies and quantifies molecules based on their unique electronic charge signatures. Notably, the device has the potential to perform low-cost, high-throughput DNA sequencing. Currently in prototype stage, Applied Biosystems will provide development support for a two-year period, initially focusing on applications in protein identification and detection of protein-binding events. 

Pharma DD talked to Timothy G. Geiser, Director of Strategy & Business Development for Applied Biosystems Group, and Jon Sauer, Founder of Eagle Research and Development, about the technology’s potential applications, its unique advantages, and next steps in its development.

PDD: What is the significance of the deal for both companies—Eagle and Applied Biosystems?  

Jon: For Eagle, it’s a simple answer—we’re a small company. The agreement with Applied Biosystems (ABI) provides financial support and biochemical expertise such that the device’s development will not be constrained, at least by these factors.  

Tim: Current analytical techniques for determining the presence and concentration of biomolecules (e.g., proteins, DNA, RNA) in biological samples require modification of the biomolecule being measured. Typically, a fluorescent or chemiluminescent moiety is attached to the target molecules via PCR or antibody association, enabling detection by a laser-based fluorimeter or luminometer, respectively. Not only are such modifications expensive and perturbing to the biomolecule under study, such assays usually cannot be done at high levels of multiplex where, particularly for proteins, detection and quantification in the same sample volume of multiple biomolecules is desired. While DNA-chip analysis can achieve a high degree of multiplexing, it requires expensive and onerous labeling procedures.  

ABI’s interest in Eagle’s technology is driven by its potential to identify and quantify a wide variety of biomolecules using a single device—without the need for labeling.  

PDD: What are potential applications for the device?  

Tim: ABI envisions a number of application areas.  

First, the device’s label-free analysis capability would be of supreme interest to scientists studying fundamental molecular biology. It’s interesting to study RNA expression, but proteins more directly mediate the real business of biology. A technology such as this, which could identify and quantify specific, multiple proteins in real time, identify specific protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions would be a powerful tool for understanding biology.  

Second, if the technology can identify individual proteins, it may also be able to detect viral and bacterial pathogens. The device could thus be utilized for high-throughput, ultra-sensitive pathogen detection.  

Third, the device could be of interest to clinical researchers interested in real-time changes in protein concentrations, and their interactions, as a patient’s disease progresses. In particular, as drugs are administered, it’s important to understand an individual’s specific biological response to them. In such a scenario, this tool could provide highly resolved, individual-based data on the effect a drug treatment has on protein profiles. For example: Perhaps you have tissue biopsies collected over time from a patient undergoing cancer therapy, and you want to map the drug treatment’s effect on biomarkers characterizing that particular cancer. In principle, Eagle’s technology would allow one to utilize very small amounts of sample that are minimally processed (as it doesn’t require amplification or fluorescent labeling of the sample) and measure multiple specific proteins on the chip—not only to identify them but also to determine their concentration relative to other proteins of interest in the sample.  

In the same vein, researchers could also do high-throughput drug testing (using either in vivo or in vitro systems) to see how protein panels change over time after exposure to drugs hypothesized to target a particular protein. Any protein subject to chemical inhibition is likely to have ripple effects—affecting other proteins’ functions—so this device could be a good way to study off-target drug effects.  

Finally, a fourth potential area is high-throughput, low-cost DNA sequencing.  

And there’s the crux of why Applied Biosystems was originally interested in this technology—it has the potential to perform high-throughput DNA sequencing at a very low cost. However, that application has been relegated as a secondary interest on ABI’s part, as it will be more challenging than applying the technology to protein analysis. Exploring the potential for protein analysis and DNA sequencing is probably beyond the scope of the current two-year agreement. From a sequencing point of view—and even from a protein-detection point of view—this is really next- (or next-next) generation technology. Many basic questions must be answered before we’ll have a good practical sense for when certain products could materialize.  

Jon: Attempting sequencing pushes the edge of the engineering limit, and that will take at least a couple of years. In the near future (i.e., within the next two years), it will be possible to use the technology in extremely useful ways involving proteins. So, during the two-year period during which ABI provides funding, Eagle will seek to develop effective chip-device fabrication processes to enable evaluation of the devices to achieve those nearer-term goals.  

PDD: What advantages does Eagle’s single-molecule detection device offer?  

Tim: In addition to label-free detection, it offers high-density detection as these devices can be fabricated with a large number of pores—they’re highly scalable. It’s possible to have thousands of nanopores, each of which can identify and count a particular biomolecule as it passes through a pore. It doesn’t matter where a pore is located or which molecule of interest passes through a particular nanopore, because they’re all individually addressable.  

Jon: Furthermore, because it’s comprised of a silicon chip, the device is fairly inexpensive and easy to manufacture in volume. While the speed of analysis by microprocessor standards is not very fast, it surely is by biochemical standards. DNA has been demonstrated elsewhere to pass through nanopores at a rate of approximately 1 million bases per second. Thus, 1,000 pores, running in parallel, equates to one gigabase per second.  

But perhaps the biggest point is the minimal amount of sample preparation involved. For all practical purposes, the DNA or protein is processed raw, requiring no complex biochemistry (e.g., PCR, labeling, or extensive purification steps) to prepare it.  

Tim: Sample prep is the bane of biological assays. PCR is a fairly sophisticated technique for amplifying DNA or RNA. But because it’s quite sensitive to biological contaminants that could inhibit the PCR reaction, it requires extensive sample preparation to eliminate them. We believe Eagle’s approach would, in principle, be much less sensitive to such contaminants.  

PDD: Last but certainly not least, please describe the underlying technology of the single-molecule detection device.  

Jon: Consider a vertical wall, or one side of a funnel-shaped nanopore with a rectangular cross section. On one side is a semiconductor and on the other is a charged solution. The wall’s surface is covered by a thin insulator to prevent charges from crossing it. On the solution side, a charge is present, e.g. due to a biomolecule,—close to the wall surface (within a couple hundred nanometers). This charge, due to the electrostatic potential it creates, pulls mobile charges in the semiconductor that pile up on the insulator (as near as possible to [and opposite]) the charge in the solution.  

This “image charge” distribution is controlled by the potential, which depends on the magnitude of the charge, distance from the wall, and the semiconductor mobile charge densities. If there is also a vertical field in the semiconductor producing a small background current, these image charges will be rapidly pulled away toward the drain in the semiconductor, causing an additional source-drain current in the semiconductor. As soon as the image charges are pulled away, they are replaced by new charges that come in the semiconductor to the insulator opposite the external charge, which in turn are also pulled away, sustaining the changed semiconductor current.  

The region where this happens within the semiconductor is the “gate region.” When the relatively slow-moving charge in the solution finally moves away from the region near the gate pulled by an external field through the pore, the added current ceases and leaves only the background current. The changing current in the semiconductor then measures the size and position of the solution charge as a function of time as it passes by the gate. Since all biomolecules have non-spherical charge distributions (with both positive and negative regions on their surfaces), biomolecules passing by the gate region produce changing currents in the semiconductor.  Since the device has multiple gate regions surrounding the solution channel, the device effectively maps those charge distributions (within the boundaries of its resolution). With sufficient time and space resolution, the device can unambiguously identify the biomolecule from this signature and provide information about its properties.  

Tim: Because a protein’s conformation is based on different amino-acid sequences held in three-dimensional configurations, we expect that individual proteins will have a unique three-dimensional charge signature measurable by the semiconductor, creating an ability to uniquely identify proteins based on their charge signature. That’s the first fundamental objective of studying these devices.  

PDD: With that premise, what’s the technology’s current stage of development, and what are next steps?  

Jon: ABI’s support for continued development was predicated on Eagle’s proven ability to fabricate the vertical embedded transistor structures and employ them for detection of biomolecules. At this time, the device dimensions are not quite small enough, and the silicon-processing sequence is not sufficiently developed for high-yield manufacturing, to field an initial product.  

As such, ABI’s support is primarily to fund development through production of a viable prototype device. Hopefully it will involve fairly straightforward size-reduction techniques, fine-tuning of the silicon processing, and device characterization using appropriate biomolecules provided by ABI.

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