The present invention relates to the field of devices and methods for chemical synthesis. More particularly, the present invention relates to an efficient apparatus and a method for separation of solid and liquid phases in high-throughput, solid phase organic synthesis, such as used in the practice of combinatorial chemistry. The invention provides an apparatus and a method for handling a plurality of solid phase reactors and the collection of products produced by those solid phase reactors. The present invention is particularly applicable for combinatorial synthesis of organic molecules, whether as part of an automated or a manual procedure.
Solid phase synthesis of organic molecules is the method of choice for preparation of libraries and arrays of compounds, which are being used for screening in the quest to find new drug candidates or pharmaceutical lead compounds, i.e., compounds which exhibit a particular biological activity of pharmaceutical interest, and which can serve as a starting point for the selection and synthesis of a drug compound, which in addition to the particular biological activity of interest has pharmacologic and toxicologic properties suitable for administration to animals, and especially humans. Manual synthesis requires repetitions of several relatively simple operations such as addition of reagents, incubation and separation of solid and liquid phases, and removal of liquids. This character of the synthetic process renders it optimal for automation. Several designs of automated instruments for combinatorial synthesis have appeared in the patent and non-patent literature. Constructions based on specialized reactors connected permanently (or semi-permanently) to containers for the storage of reagents are strongly limited in their throughput. The productivity of automated instruments can be dramatically improved by use of disposable reaction vessels (such as multiwell plates or test tube arrays) into which reagents are added by pipetting, or by direct delivery from storage containers.
Liquid removal from the reaction vessel or reactor is usually accomplished by filtration through a filter-type material. The drawback of this method is the potential clogging of the filter, leading to extremely slow liquid removal, or to contamination of adjacent reactor compartments. An alternative technique based on the removal of liquid by suction from the surface above the sedimented solid phase is limited due to incomplete removal of the liquid from the reaction volume. See U.S. Pat. No. 6,045,755 issued on Apr. 4, 2000.
The present application is an improvement upon U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,202,418, 5,338,831 and 5,342,585 which describe placement of resin in polypropylene mesh packets and removal of liquid through the openings of these packets (therefore this process is basically filtration), or removal of the liquid from the pieces of porous textile-like material by centrifugation.
Liquid removal by centrifugation was described and is the subject of several publications (see the book “Aspects of the Merrified Peptide Synthesis” by Christian Birr in the series Reactivity and Structure Concepts in Organic Chemistry vol. 8, K. Hafner, J.-M. Lehn, C. W. Rees, P. von Rague Schleyer, B. M. Trost, R. Zahradnik, Eds., Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, 1978, and German Patent Application P 20 17351.7, G. 70 13256.8, 1970. These references describe the use of centrifugation for liquid removal from slurry of solid phase particles in a concentrical vessel equipped with a filtration material in its perimeter and spun around its axis.
There still remains however a need for a simple, efficient means of separating liquid and solid phases during solid phase synthesis of organic molecules, particularly a method amenable to use with automated methods for such syntheses and allowing easy recovery of a product cleaved from an active solid surface used in a solid phase reactor.
Tube holding racks for use in immunoassays are a very different type of application than the art of chemical synthesis. The present invention is concerned with an apparatus and method for producing new chemical compounds, that can then be tested for biological activity. In marked contrast, immunoassays are an art concerned with making quantitative determinations of the amount of a substance.
A description of the techniques used for carrying out solid phase chemical synthesis reactions is provided in “Combinatorial Chemistry” by Nicholas K. Terrett, ISBN 0-19-850219-2 (1998), Oxford University Press, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
In industries such as the pharmaceutical industry, compounds are frequently synthesized for testing purposes. One technique for accomplishing the synthesis involves subjecting a resin-bound starting molecule to a series of reagent chemicals that react with the starting molecule in such a manner to achieve the desired synthesized compound. A description of this technique is provided in “Solid Phase Synthesis”, by J. M. Stewart and J. D. Young, second edition (ISBN #0-935940-03-0, copyright 1984), published by Pierce Chemical Company of Rockford, Ill., which is incorporated herein by reference.
Manually handling reaction vessels during this process is cumbersome and labor intensive, especially when large lots of compounds are being created simultaneously. To address this problem, various articles of sophisticated laboratory equipment have been developed. For example, commercial solid phase synthesizers (e.g., The Advanced ChemTech Model 396 synthesizer) can perform simultaneous reactions in up to ninety-six separate polypropylene wells. However, the relatively high cost of such equipment typically precludes smaller, individual laboratories from obtaining these synthesizers as standard equipment. Even larger laboratories faced with projects of modest proportion may find such equipment to be cumbersome and/or unnecessary for many routine uses.
Another synthesizer known as the Multiblock, which is available from Peptides International, Inc. of Louisville, Ky., allows chemists or users to synthesize forty-two samples simultaneously. While more affordable than many prior art synthesizers, the Multiblock may still be too expensive for some laboratories. Other shortcomings of the Multiblock result from the fact that assemblies known as multistoppers are typically used to seal all of the reaction vessels during the reaction process. Besides being constructed of component parts which may require repair or maintenance over time, these multistoppers require all of the reaction vessels to be unsealed when an operator wishes to unseal the multistopper and remove only a single reaction vessel held within the Multiblock synthesizer. Still further, the Multiblock's use of a bulky set of plates attachable with spanning shafts results in a somewhat cumbersome and inflexible design.
One advantage of the present invention is that numerous reaction vessels may be simultaneously handled in a convenient and user friendly fashion during multiple simultaneous chemical synthesis. The present invention provides a convenient apparatus and method that allows easy recovery of product cleaved from a solid phase chemical synthesis reactor.
The present invention provides a new apparatus for use in chemical synthesis, comprising:
In one exemplary embodiment of an apparatus according to the teachings of the present invention, a receiving container holder is provided that has a plurality of holding position bores disposed in a horizontal array. Each of these holding position bores extend vertically through the receiving container holder. The receiving container holder is capable of holding a receiving container in each of the holding position bores. The receiving container has a bore that is dimensioned to receive a reactor that has an active solid surface, of the type known in the art of solid phase chemical synthesis. Disposed at one end of the receiving container bore is a cavity. In use, after a chemical reaction on the active solid surface has produced a product, the product may be cleaved by a reaction, such reactions being known in the art, to release the product. The cavity is sized to not admit the reactor.
The product may be collected from the reactor and into the cavity by application of centrifugal force directed toward the second bore end. This may be accomplished either simultaneously with, or preceding the use of a vacuum to remove any solvent present from the product in the cavity.
The present invention also provides a method. This is a method for separating a substance from an active solid surface, comprising:
In a preferred embodiment of the new method, the steps c) and d) are carried out simultaneously.
It is to be understood that an individual receiving container may be removed from a receiving container holder while other individual receiving containers remain engaged to the receiving container holder. That is, a person skilled in the art will appreciate that an individual receiving container may be removed from a receiving container holder to allow manipulation of a product that has been collected within that receiving container. And, this may be done while leaving other receiving containers engaged to the receiving container holder. This allows either manual or robotic transport of product samples from one receiving container holder to another, for use in protocols of combinatorial chemical synthesis.
The reaction may be carried out on an active portion of the surface of a solid reactor article that can be received by the receiving container or alternatively, the reaction may be carried out on the entire surface of an article that can be received by the reactor holder. In yet another alternative, the reaction may be carried out on the surface of a plurality of articles that comprise the reactor. In this latter alternative, it is to be appreciated that particulate material with a suitable surface for carrying out a solid-phase synthesis is to be preferred in use of the present invention. Beads of a small size, and having a suitable surface for carrying out a solid-phase synthesis, are especially preferred for use with the present invention. Reactors in the form of rods or pins are also suitable for use with the present invention.
A suitable reactor is available commercially from Mimotopes Inc., 11772 Sorrento Valley Road, San Diego, Calif. 92121 as the “SynPhase Lantern.” Additional suitable reactors for solid-phase chemical synthesis are known to those skilled in the art. An alternative reactor type that can be used with the present invention is also available in the form of NanoKans® from Irori Inc. Reactors in the form of rods or pins are also suitable for use with the present invention.
The invention disclosed here provides both an apparatus for use in carrying out solid-phase chemical synthesis, and a method for carrying out such synthesis. In particular, the present invention provides an apparatus and method that are of particular valuable utility in recovering a cleaved product from a solid-phase chemical reaction. By cleaved product is meant here a product cleaved from a solid phase after a chemical reaction that has taken place upon the solid phase, the cleaved product being the product desired from the reaction. The new apparatus and method will be understood by those skilled in the art of chemical synthesis by reference to the accompanying drawing figures.
One embodiment 10 of the new apparatus may be seen in perspective in
In
The receiving container 14 is removably engageable to the holding position bore 16. The engagement is sufficiently strong to retain the receiving container 14 to the receiving container holder 12 when the receiving container holder 12 is inverted. The removable engagement may be by a friction fit of the receiving container 14 to the receiving position bore 16, that is by a friction fit of the receiving container 14 to the receiving container holder 12 at a receiving position bore 16. Alternatively, the removable engagement may be by elastic deformation of both the receiving container 14 and the receiving container holder 12. Also alternatively, the removable engagement may be by elastic deformation of either the receiving container 14 or the receiving container holder 12.
It is preferred that the receiving container 14 and the receiving container holder 12 each be constructed of a polymeric material, where the polymeric material selected for each may be the same polymeric material or a different polymeric material. Examples of suitable polymeric materials include polypropylene, polyethylene, or a copolymer. Suitability of a polymeric material may be readily determined by consideration of the need for insolubility in the solvents used in carrying out chemical reactions of solid-phase chemical synthesis, and the requirements for removable engagement described above.
The elastic deformation may be accomplished by a snap fit of the receiving container 14 to the receiving position bore 16, that is by a snap fit of the receiving container 14 to the receiving container holder 12 at a receiving position bore 16. Such a snap fit may be accomplished by providing a protruding structural element on either the receiving container 14 or the receiving position bore 16, the protruding structural element being dimensioned to be closely received within a mating structural element of the article being removably engaged. An example of a construction of this latter type is the provision of a protruding ring or annular ridge around a receiving container, and provision of a corresponding groove disposed on the receiving container holder which mates with the ring or ridge for removable engagement.
The removable engagement of the new apparatus provides for engagement of the receiving container 14 to the receiving container holder 12, in an engaged position 30, where the receiving container 14 is retained by the receiving container holder 12 when the receiving container holder 12 is inverted. When either the engagement by friction fit or alternatively by elastic deformation is released, the receiving container 14 is movable to a released position 32. In this latter released position 32, the receiving container 14 may be removed by gravity when the receiving container holder 12 is inverted. The receiving container 14 may be moved from the engaged position 30 to the released position 32 by application of mechanical force. This mechanical force may be applied manually by a hand of an operator, or it may be applied robotically by action of a finger or lever acting from below the receiving container 14.
The receiving container holder 12 of this embodiment is rectangular, having four spaced apart corners 34 in a horizontal plane, each of the four spaced apart corners having a shape; and wherein the shape of at least one of the four spaced apart corners is shaped differently from the shape of the other of the four spaced apart corners to form an indexing element 36, here a rounded corner. This arrangement is illustrated in
In
In
Another part of the method of using the new apparatus is illustrated in
Preferably, the array of receiving position bores has a number of such bores selected from: 48 bores, 96 bores and 384 bores. More preferably, the array has 48 bores. The 48 bore preferred embodiment array has the same footprint as a 96 well microtiter plate, and is particularly well suited for use in automated chemical synthesis procedures due to the wide availability of robotic equipment for use with the 96 well microtiter plate format. The use of this format reduces the need for specially modified equipment or customized software for using the array. This plate format has a characteristic footprint size of about 85 mm by about 130 mm. Other sizes of arrays, using a number of bores different from those indicated as preferred here are still to be contemplated as within the spirit and scope of the present invention. The use of these different sized arrays might simply require the use of accessory processing equipment that would be different from that used for the microtiter plate format. It is to be understood that other numbers of receiving position bores can be present in the inventive receiving container holder, without departing from the spirit and teaching of the invention.
By vacuum here is meant reduced pressure over the receiving container. This vacuum may be a reduced pressure that is referred to in the art as a “partial vacuum.”
The present invention is not to be limited in scope by the specific embodiments described herein, which are intended as illustrative examples of the invention. Indeed, various modifications of the invention, in addition to those described herein will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the foregoing description and accompanying figures. Such modifications are intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0225631.1 | Nov 2002 | GB | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60393999 | Jul 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10611092 | Jul 2003 | US |
Child | 12175810 | US |