The present invention relates to apparatus and methods for disaggregation of tissue in a closed volume and to apparatus and methods for thermal control of disaggregated tissue.
In many areas of medicine and biology there is a need to take tissue samples and disaggregate them into cell clumps and single cells for further processing. The number of applications is large and includes extraction of cells, for example:
In many applications it is desirable to maintain as many healthy cells as possible, and to keep them in a clean, sterile condition. In this application closed, aseptic, sterile and like terms are intended to mean the condition whereby biological material is separated from its surroundings, but not necessarily wholly free of a bioburden or other contamination, merely free enough that such bioburden or other contamination, if any, does not have a significant influence on the viability or usability of the material which is disaggregated.
One technique of tissue disaggregation of cells is known from WO2018/130845, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference, as if the wording was repeated herein. In that application, an aseptic tissue processing method, kit and device is disclosed for disaggregation of solid tissue to derive eukaryotic cells into either single cells or small cell number aggregates. The disclosure also describes a semi-automatic aseptic tissue processing method. It is explained in WO2018/130845 that the conditions during solid tissue disaggregation and time taken to harvest the cells have a substantial impact on the viability and recovery of the final cellularised material. A kit is proposed, which together with hardware can introduce enzymes into a hanging bag to aid disaggregation, the kit including a separate bag into which can be pumped a disaggregated sample and a cryoprotectant for freezing after initial cooling.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,439,759 describes a kneading device which includes an internal baffle to aid mixing a closed bag of materials, but the thermal control of this arrangement is not considered.
With that background the inventors of the present invention have realised that there is a need to disaggregate cells taking into account more parameters than have been considered in WO2018/130845, to improve the performance of the disaggregation, freezing and thawing processes, particularly thermal control during such processes, which are not addressed in WO2018/130845 or U.S. Pat. No. 6,439,759.
The present invention concerns apparatus in the form of a treading device for effective disaggregation of tissue into individual cells or cell clumps, typically mammalian cells, and addressing the need for improved thermal control during the disaggregation process. The present invention according to another aspect concerns a thermal control method used with the above-mentioned treading device(s) as well as subsequent disaggregated tissue processing steps. The present invention according to another aspect concerns a disposable flexible container, for example a bag, adapted for use in the devices mentioned above. The above-mentioned aspects are represented in the claims appended herein. More advantages and benefits of the present invention will become readily apparent to the person skilled in the art in view of the detailed description below which provides examples of the invention.
The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
a,
11
b, and 11c show alternative ways of sealing the sample bag;
Referring to
The housing 110 has a chassis 112 to which is attached a motor unit 114 which includes an electric motor and gearbox, which has an output speed of 10-300 rpm. The output shaft of the motor and gearbox 114 has a crank 116 which drives a connecting rod 118, which in turn is pivotably connected to a treading mechanism 120, which will be moved through one treading cycle for each revolution of crank 116, i.e. a treading cycle between 0.2 and 6 seconds. In more detail this treading mechanism has a parallelogram four bar linkage, which includes two spaced pivots 122 and 124 rigidly mounted to the chassis 112 which pivotably mount two opposed parallel horizontal bars 126 and 128 respectively. Each of the horizontal bars has two parallel treading bars 130 and 132, pivotably connected thereto one on each side of the pivots 122 and 124, together forming the parallelogram linkage. The connecting rod 118 is conveniently pivotably held to an extension of the top horizontal bar, such that moving of that extension causes cyclic up and down motion (in the orientation shown) of the treading bars 130 and 132. To each treading bar 130 and 132 is connected a foot assembly 134 and 136 which, by virtue of the above-mentioned cyclic motion, will move up and down with motion of the crank 116, in a sequentially manner, i.e. when one foot is up the other will be down and vice versa.
The foot assemblies 134 and 136 each include a flat faced sole plate 138 and 140 each plate being spring-mounted to a upper foot frame 142 and 144 respectively, by coiled metal springs 146. In the arrangement described above, or an equivalent arrangement if used, the springs 146 are preloaded. In this case the combined preload is preferably 40-80N, more preferably 30-70 N for each foot preferably about 60N. The combined spring rate is 1-5 N per mm of travel, preferably about 3N per mm, and the intended foot travel is about 8-12 mm, preferably about 10 mm. In addition the surface area of each foot is intended to be about 20 to 50 cm2, preferably about 35 cm2. This results in a notional, pressure on the bag of between zero (when the foot lifts off the bag or has substantially no load, and up to about 6 N/cm2 (about 9 psi): The preferred notional pressure is about 2N/cm2 (about 3 psi). However, given that the bag may not, at least at the start of the treading process, contain a homogeneous material, then there will be lumps of material where the force exerted will be concentrated , and so the pressure is described as ‘notional’ which is the idealised situation, for example to provide a minimum pressure resistance of the bag 10 exerted toward the end of the treading process.
At the bottom of the chassis is a receiving area 148 for the flexible bag 10 and adjacent the receiving area 148 is heat transfer plate 150. The area 148 is large enough to admit the sample processing bag 10 slidable onto the plate 150 via the front of the chassis (the front being shown in
With reference additionally to
During the above-mentioned disaggregation processing, the forces exerted by the foot assemblies 134 and 136 are reacted by the heat transfer plate 150. This means that the sample bag 10 is pressed against the contact surface 151 of the plate 150 during processing, providing good surface contact between the sample bag 10 and the plate's surface 151, and consequently improved heat energy transfer.
Yet another alternative, not shown, a simple bag-in-bag arrangement could be employed to contain leaks. In yet another alternative, the bag may include a base which has resilient (at least at room temperature) separate wells, such that aliquots of sample can be removed without using the whole sample, for example after freezing as described below. Alternatively, a sealable bag may be further heat sealed into portions for allowing the separation of the sample.
The processing of a sample put into the bag 10 can in one example largely follow the steps described in WO2018/130845. In this arrangement the sealed bag 10 containing tissue is suspended in an aqueous solution which may contain digestive enzymes such as collagenases and proteases to accelerate the breakdown of the tissue, introduced into the bag via a port 16. The bag is here placed on the plate 150 and warmed from, for example, an external heat source to approximately 35° C. to accelerate the rate of tissue digestion. One important difference proposed here is that a single sample processing bag is employed, and digestive enzymes can be introduced through one of the ports 16 in the bag prior to or during disaggregation. The heat transfer plate 150 can be used to introduce heat energy into the bag by heating the plate on its underside to provide the desired temperature in the bag for enzymatic action. That heat could conveniently come from an electrically heated warming plate, or electric heating elements in or on the plate 150. The amount of disaggregation action will depend on numerous parameters, for example the size, density and elasticity of the initial tissue sample, and so the time for disaggregation and the rate of treading will vary significantly. Too long or overly vigorous treading could lead to decreased cell viability. Thus, the motor unit speed and the disaggregation period is important. One option to address this problem is to time the processing according to a look-up table which includes times and output speeds required to disaggregate similar samples. Another option is to measure the instantaneous electrical power or electrical energy over time needed to perform the disaggregation processing, or to measure the force or stress exerted on the plate 150 or another part of the mechanism, and to stop after a predetermined threshold has been reached, to indicate that the sample has been sufficiently disaggregated. As the power/forces/stresses reduce the disaggregation is closer to completion. Another option is to measure light absorbance through the bag—the, greater the absorbance, the closer the sample is to complete disaggregation. Once disaggregation is complete the bag contents can be transferred, and the cells or other constituents of interest can be separated and put back into a fresh bag for freezing in the device 100/100′. Alternatively, and preferably the whole disaggregated materials can be left in the bag and device for freezing. A cryoprotectant is introduced in to the bag through a port 16.
Another difference between the present methodology and that described in WO2018/130845 is that once a cryoprotectant is introduced, the device with the disaggregated sample and cryoprotectant in the bag is mounted (or remains in) the device, and the whole device is mounted in the freezer 40 as described above. The base of the freezer is cold and so draws heat energy from the bag 10 via the heat transfer plate 150. To control the formation of ice and prevent supercooling of the sample while the bag it is being cooled, it can be massaged by the feet 134 and 136, in the manner described above, albeit at a slower rate than for disaggregation, to control ice nucleation and so increase the viability of the cells after thawing. Electrical energy can be supplied to the motor unit 114 via a wire conductor to maintain motion of the mechanism 120 inside the freezer, e.g. freezer 40 (
Since the device is removeable from the freezer, cleaning after use is made easier.
When required for use, the frozen disaggregated samples in a bag 10 can be thawed rapidly in the device 100/100′ by further external heating of the plate 150, and/or by partially immersing the device 100/100′ in a warmed water bath, maintained at about 37° C., and the cryoprotectant removed. In each case the bag can be massaged during thawing. If the enzymes are still present, they too can be removed if needed, for example by means of filtering. Generally, they will have had little or no effect on the cells during cryopreservation because their action is halted at low temperatures. All the process manipulations, warming, disaggregation, cooling, freezing and then thawing occur with the sample in the same sealed flexible bag 10, and may be performed in a single device. This is not only time and space efficient, but it enables a single record to capture everything that happened to the sample during processing, e.g. temperatures, durations, disaggregation speed, freezing protocol, and lessens the chance for errors, such as a sample spending too much time in an uncontrolled environment between processing machines.
More specific examples of the apparatus and techniques used in tissue sample processing and freezing are given below.
Once the tissue T is inside the bag 10, the opening 11 can be sealed by a mechanical clamping seal 9, shown closed and sealed in
An alternative or additional means for sealing a bag 10 is shown in
With reference to
Loading of the bag 10 into the treading device 100 for disaggregation can then be commenced, either with or without the frame 20/20′ and bunding cover 30, as illustrated in
The disaggregation process then takes place as described above. Once complete, which may take between several minutes and several hours for example around 10 minutes to 7 hours, preferably 40 minutes to 1 hour, the disaggregated liquefied sample may be subdivided in to aliquots, for example using the bag set described above, and an additional sample aliquot bag 7, as shown in
As described above, the sample bag 10, can remain in the treading device 100 (
The invention is not to be seen as limited by the embodiments described above, but can be varied within the scope of the appended claims as is readily apparent to the person skilled in the art. For instance, the treading mechanism described above is preferred because it provides wholly pivoting mechanical interconnections which are less likely to jam in cold conditions than sliding surfaces, but that mechanism could be replaced with any mechanically equivalent means for treading two or more feet sequentially. The flat feet described may be replaced with roller feet, where the treading motion is from side to side rather than up and down. The treading described, or its mechanical equivalent, is preferably at a rate of 2 or 3 treads for each foot per second to optimise disaggregation and maximise cell recovery, and is a steady treading, but the treading could be quicker or slower, or intermittent, for different cell types.
Since the device 100/100′ is intended to be placed in a freezer and subjected to extremely low temperatures (e.g. minus 80 degrees Celsius or lower), the use of metal parts, particularly those parts like springs 146 is preferred since polymeric parts become much more rigid at low temperatures. Also, tightly fitting parts, like pistons and cylinders, can become jammed or ill-fitting at very low temperatures so simple pivotable linkages like the mechanism 120 described are preferred.
Referring to
Thereby, the treading force is limited to the spring rate of the associated follower assembly spring 231 and not the power of the drive motor 1. The force applied to the bag is, in use, limited by the springs because the mechanism drives the feet up and the springs push them back down. This makes sure that:
Referring also to
The device 200 further includes heat transfer plate 250, which performs the same function as the heat transfer plate 150. This plate 250, however, is hinged to one side of the housing at hinge 255 (
Each foot is adjustable in height relative to a heat transfer plate 250 of the device 200 and an indication of its movement is monitored also by the controller. Thus, even though the rotary encoder may indicate that the motor is turning, a mechanical failure, such as a failure of the toothed belt 222, may still be detected by the controller, and a suitable action can be implemented, such as raising an alarm.
The device 200 has the same external dimensions as the device 100, and the device's housing 210 is intended to slide inside the controlled rate freezer 40 with the freezer lid in place as described above and illustrated in
For convenience, terms such as upper, lower, up and down, and more descriptive terms such as feet, tread and treading have been used to described the invention shown in the drawings, but in practice, the device shown could be oriented in any manner such that those terms become for example inverted or less descriptive in that new orientation. Therefore, no limitation as to orientation should be construed by such terms or equivalent terms.
The invention provides A device (100/100′) for the disaggregation of tissue samples into individual cells or cell clumps in a closed flexible bag (10), the device including a mechanical disaggregation mechanism (120) and a tissue sample bag receiving area (148), said device further including a heat transfer plate (150) for transferring heat energy to or from the area (148), the plate having a first plate surface (151) adjacent the area (148) and an opposing surface (152) exposed to external thermal influence which faces away from the area (148).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1902763.0 | Mar 2019 | GB | national |
1904249.8 | Mar 2019 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/000053 | 2/28/2020 | WO | 00 |