Claims
- 1. A method of analyzing a plurality of molecular fractions from a population of molecules from or within the same or different origin(s) in high throughput manner, comprising the steps of:
(1) fractionating each of said plurality of molecular fractions into a spectrum or a group of serial fractions containing sub-populations of serial fractionated molecules according to properties of said fractionated molecules by at least one fractionating methods wherein each of said spectrum or said group of serial fractions is assigned a primary designated order according to parameters, such as distance, timing, or order, of said fraction being arranged or present in a fractionating media of said fractionating methods and a secondary designated order according to its origin(s); (2) recovering the serial fractionated molecules from said group of serial fractions off the fractionating media such that each of said serial fractionated molecules is accorded with the same primary and secondary designated orders in step (1) as each of said group of serial fractions from which it is recovered; (3) arraying said recovered serial fractionated molecules onto a supporting material according to their corresponding primary and secondary designated orders in step (1); (4) designing and selecting probing molecules that can interact and bind to the serial fractionated molecules arrayed on the supporting material in step (3); and (5) analyzing and correlating presentation patterns of the arrayed fractionated molecules in step (3) according to their corresponding primary and secondary designated orders in step (1). (6) measuring and predicting the properties of said fractionated molecules in step (1).
- 2. The method of claim 1 wherein the step (4) further comprises a step of performing incubations or hybridizations of the probing molecules with the arrayed fractionated molecules on the supporting material.
- 3. The method of claim 1 wherein the step (4) further comprises a step of detecting the amount of probing molecules on the supporting material by a detection method, such as either one of chemical, chemiluminescent, fluorescent or radioactive method.
- 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the fractionated molecules of step (1) are mixtures of similar or different molecules with similar or different properties capable of being fractionated into a spectrum or a group of serial factions after a proper fractionating process.
- 5. The method of claim 4, wherein the fractionated molecules include, but not limited to, nuclear acid (DNA, cDNA or RNA), protein, peptide, lipid, or polysaccharides.
- 6. The method of claim 1, wherein the fractionated molecules in step (1) are at their original forms or are further manipulated;
- 7. The methods of claim 1, wherein the properties of the fractionated molecules in step (1) include, but not limited to, molecular size, charges, solubility, weight, density, affinity, mass or color.
- 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the fractionating methods in step (1) include separating methods selected from the group consisting of, but not limited to, agarose gel electrophoresis, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), two-dimensions PAGE, isoelectrical focusing, ion exchange chromatography, filtration chromatography, hydrophobic chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), thin layer chromatography (TLC), gas chromatography, atomic absorption, affinity chromatography and gradient centrifugation.
- 9. The method of claim 8, wherein the fractionating methods can be a combination of two or more separating methods from the group.
- 10. The method in claim 1, wherein the distance or timing in step (1) can be the migration distances of the fractioned molecules on said fractionating media or the timing of the fractioned molecules run-out from said fractionating media.
- 11. The method in claim 1, wherein the fractionating methods in step (1) may be performed based an arbitrary set of cut-off points such as the molecular sizes of the molecules referred by companying molecular weight standards.
- 12. The method in claim 11 wherein the arbitrary set of cut-off points can be set in a linear, logarithm, or exponential relationship of said companying molecular weight standards.
- 13. The methods in claim 1, wherein the primary designated orders in step (1) can be any natural order formed by said group of serial fractions or can be a rearranged order by any way.
- 14. The method in claim 1, wherein the methods of recovering in step (2) can be optionally performed by not separating the serial fractionated molecules from said fractionating media.
- 15. The method in claim 1, wherein the methods of recovering in step (2) can be automated.
- 16. The method in claim 1, wherein the methods of recovering in step (2) can be at the aids of kits or devices commercially available.
- 17. The method in claim 1, wherein the methods of arraying the serial fractionated molecules to the supporting material in step (3) can be automated by using micro-arrayers or by manually with or without any devices.
- 18. The method in claim 1, wherein the total number of the fractions containing fractionated molecules with the primary designated orders in step (1) to be arrayed to the supporting material in step (3) can be from two to over 500,000 fractions for per piece of the supporting material.
- 19. The methods in claim 1 wherein the step of arraying said group of fractionated molecules in step (3) may be optionally performed in an arbitrary or any order.
- 20. The method in claim 1, wherein the supporting material in step (3) is selected from the group consisting of nitrocellulose, nylon, plastic, glass, multi-well plates and beads.
- 21. The method in claim 20 wherein the supporting material can be further treated to have a charge or chemically modified to carry molecules binding enhancers such as poly-lysine or being silylated and silanated.
- 22. The method in claim 1, wherein the probing materials in step (4) can be RNAs, DNAs, proteins, antibodies or chemically modified proteins with a chemical or fluorescent label or radioactive isotope.
- 23. The method of claim 2, wherein the incubation or hybridization of probing molecules is performed either manually or automatically.
- 24. The method of claim 3, wherein the step of detecting the amount of probing molecules on the supporting material can be performed manually, such as exposing a regular film in laboratory if the spots of fractionated molecules are few in number or using instruments such as micro-array scanners if there are many spots of fractionated molecules on the supporting material.
- 25. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of analyzing presentation patterns of the serial fractionated molecules is performed by mathematic calculation and computerized image and data analysis in a high throughput way to generate database.
- 26. The methods in claim 25, wherein the mathematic calculation can accurately determine the migration distance or run-out time of the serial fractionated molecules in or from the fractionating media according to the primary designated orders in step (1) of claim 1.
- 27. The methods in claim 25, wherein the computerized image and data analysis can accurately determine the amount of each of the serial fractionated molecule according to the primary designated orders and secondary designated order in step (1) of claim 1.
- 28. The method in claim 25, wherein the computerized image and data analysis can enlarge the image of micro-array spots of each of the serial fractionated molecules.
- 29. The method in claim 28 wherein the amount of fractionated molecules needed for to the step of computerized image and data analysis is far more less than that needed for conventional Northern blot analysis or Western blot analysis.
- 30. The method in claim 1, wherein the step of arraying the serial fractionated molecules directly onto the supported material generates stronger signals to increase detection sensitivity compared to conventional Northern blot analysis or Western blot analysis.
- 31. The method in claim 25 wherein the methods of computerized image and data analysis can directly collect, analyze and convert information from the fractionated molecules into dependable database, which can not be achieved by the conventional Northern blot analysis or Western blot analysis.
- 32. A method of generating molecular fractions from a population of molecules from or within the same or different origin(s) suitable for further manipulation in a high throughput manner, comprising the steps of:
(1) providing a plurality of molecular fractions from said origin(s) in a form ready to be fractionated; (2) fractionating each of said plurality of molecular fractions into a spectrum or a group of serial fractions containing sub-populations of serial fractionated molecules according to properties of said fractionated molecules by at least one fractionating methods wherein each of said spectrum or said group of serial fractions is assigned a primary designated order according to parameters, such as distance, timing, or order, of said fraction being arranged or present in a fractionating media of said fractionating methods and a secondary designated order according to its origin(s); (3) recovering the serial fractionated molecules from said group of serial fractions off the fractionating media such that each of said serial fractionated molecules is accorded with the same primary and secondary designated orders in step (2) as each of said group of serial fractions from which it is recovered; and (4) arraying the said recovered serial fractionated molecules onto a supporting material according to their corresponding primary and secondary designated orders in step (2) to be manipulated further in a high throughput manner.
- 33. A method of profiling representation patterns of molecular fractions prepared from a variety of different origins in a high throughput manner, comprising the steps of:
(1) providing a plurality of molecular fractions from said variety of different origins in forms ready to be fractionated; (2) fractionating each of said plurality of molecular fractions into a spectrum or a group of serial fractions containing sub-populations of serial fractionated molecules according to properties of said fractionated molecules by at least one fractionating methods wherein each of said spectrum or said group of serial fractions is assigned a primary designated order according to parameters, such as distance, timing, or order, of said fraction being arranged or present in a fractionating media of said fractionating methods and a secondary designated order according to its origins; (3) recovering the serial fractionated molecules from said group of serial fractions off the fractionating media such that each of said serial fractionated molecules is accorded with the same primary and secondary designated orders in step (2) as each of said group of serial fractions from which it is recovered; (4) repeating step (2) and step (3) for each of said variety of different origins until the fractionation and recovery of all fractions of said variety of different origins are completed; (5) arraying the said recovered serial fractionated molecules from said variety of different origins onto a supporting material according to their corresponding primary and secondary designated orders in step (2) to continue in step (6) or to be manipulated further later; (6) designing and selecting desirable probing molecules intended to interact with the serial fractionated molecules arrayed on the supporting material in step (5) to obtain desirable representation patterns of the arrayed fractionated molecules from said variety of different origins; and (7) analyzing and comparing said presentation patterns characteristics of the arrayed fractionated molecules from said variety of different origins according to their corresponding primary and secondary designated orders in step (2); and (8) measuring and predicting the properties of said fractionated molecules in step (2).
- 34. The method in claim 33, wherein the variety of different origins comprise human tissues, but not limited to, from placenta, bladder, brain, frontal lobe of brain, hippocampus of brain, occipital lobe of brain, parietal lobe of brain, Temporal lobe of brain, breast, cerebellum, colon, esophagus, heart, kidney, liver, lung, muscle, ovary, pancreas, rectum, skin, small intestine, duodenum, Ileum of the small intestine, Jejunum of the small intestine, spleen, stomach, testis, tonsil, uterus, cervix; and uterus corpus.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application claims the benefit of the filing date of U.S. provisional application, U.S. Ser. No. 60/402,370, filed Aug. 8, 2002.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60402370 |
Aug 2002 |
US |