1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a hybridization method and hybridization equipment for achieving higher speed and higher efficiency hybridization for biopolymers such as deoxyribonucleic acid (hereafter called DNA), or ribonucleic acid (hereafter called RNA) or proteins attached to DNA, RNA, or the like.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In measuring gene sequences of biopolymers such as DNA, RNA, or proteins attached to RNA or DNA, or the like, DNA chips for hybridization have been used until now.
DNA chips used for hybridization include the one constructed such that multiple electrodes are provided on a substrate and a current source is connected to each electrode, as mentioned, for example, in Michael J. Heller, “An Active Microelectronics Device for Multiplex DNA Analysis,” IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine, 1996, March/April, pp. 100-101. The number of electrodes is about 100 to 10000 and, in general, known different DNAs are fixed to each electrode.
By causing hybridization by passing unknown DNA on a substrate on which such known DNAs are fixed, the unknown DNA is bonded to corresponding DNA sequences. If a fluorescent reagent is bonded to unknown DNA in advance, the sequence of the unknown DNA bonded to known DNA can be known.
The above will be further described in detail below. As shown in
In addition, if known and unknown DNAs are bonded causing sequence mismatching by mistake, this bonding can be cut off by applying a slight negative voltage to electrode 81 on the contrary after hybridization as shown in
However, such conventional method has the following problems:
(1) The method requires individual electrodes to be provided for every site on a DNA chip. This is expensive as well as complicated in construction and it is necessary to ensure wide electrode spaces. Accordingly, this method cannot increase the number of sites and the site pattern on the chip has less degree of freedom.
(2) If a kind of unnecessary DNA having a sequence different from that of the known DNA is once gathered to a site, it is bonded to the known DNA but defectively. For example, as shown in
On the other hand, assume that both unknown DNA (B2) and unknown DNA (A2) are gathered to site B on which known DNA (B1: not shown in the drawing) is fixed. Then, if known DNA (B1) bonded with unknown DNA (B2) causes the appropriate hybridization, unknown DNA (A2) is unnecessary for site B.
The present invention is intended to solve the above-described problems; the objective is to provide a high-speed and high-precision hybridization method in which high-speed hybridization can be implemented using a simple construction and to offer hybridization equipment in which the above method is realized.
In addition, another objective of the present invention is to offer a hybridization method which can improve the possibility of each biopolymer encountering correct sites, that is, to improve the hybridization efficiency and to provide hybridization equipment in which the above method is realized.
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The present invention will be described below in detail using the drawings.
In a region over substrate 1, a construction for storing fluid e.g. solution or gel is employed (not shown in the drawing). This fluid contains biopolymers 21 movable in the fluid (biopolymers on the movable side).
In addition, for biopolymers 2 on the fixed side and biopolymers 21 on the movable side, they can be selected as the known biopolymers on either side and the unknown biopolymers on the other side. They can also be selected as the probe biopolymers on either side and the target biopolymers on the other side.
Further, in this embodiment, an example is described in which biopolymers 2 on the fixed side are known probe DNA 2 and biopolymers on the movable side are unknown target DNA 21.
Magnets 4a and 4b are arranged so that poles N and S are counter to each other on both sides of the sites as shown in
In such a configuration, the region over substrate 1 is filled with a solution in which DNA 21 is mixed. The negatively charged target DNA moves through the solution and is attracted toward positive electrode 3a as shown in
This makes target DNA 21 in the solution be attracted towards the sites and thus the concentration of target DNA in the vicinity of the sites increases. For example, if target DNA 21 is attracted from the height of 20 μm over the sites before attraction to the height of 20 nm, target DNA 21 is compressed by 1000-fold and so the mixed DNA concentration increases by 1000-fold.
Further, since target DNA 21 is deflected on the positive electrode side if the solution is kept attracted toward the positive electrode, target DNA 21 is moved in the opposite direction again by reversing both the electric field and the magnetic field synchronously on the way (an already known mechanism for reversal can be used). This enables highly concentrated conditions of target DNA over each site to be achieved.
In addition, the present invention is not restricted to the above embodiment but may be embodied in other specific forms, changes, and versions without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. Such changes and versions are enumerated below.
(1) Although description is made for DNA as a sample in the above embodiment, the present invention can be applied widely to charged biopolymers such as DNA, RNA, protein attached to DNA or RNA, etc.
(2) For example, the planar shape of electrodes may be bow-shaped bent backward against the sites as shown in
Further, as shown in
Also, the shape of the cross section of the electrodes facing the sites may be triangular as shown in
Incidentally, power supply 50 shown in
Further, the magnetic field can be generated using a coil instead of magnets;
In the figures from
(3) The electrodes may be separated from substrate 1 using a member for holding electrodes (not shown in the drawing) as shown in
(4) This method or equipment can be operated by applying only an electric field without a magnetic field. With this configuration, target DNA can be attracted towards an electrode and stirred. Therefore, reasonably high-speed hybridization becomes possible.
(5) In any embodiment, if the solution is changed to gel, the moving speed of the target DNA can be decreased.
(6) For electrodes, both metals and inorganic type materials such as carbon can be employed.
(7) The voltage should be a value at which bubbles due to electrolysis are not generated, for example 1.3 V or less.
(8) Substrate 1 may be made of wire or mesh, not a plate.
As described above, the following effects are achieved according to the present invention:
(1) Since the distribution of the target DNA in the vicinity of the probe DNA becomes highly concentrated, hybridization can be performed at a higher speed.
(2) Since a force to rip the hybridized DNA can also be generated by devising the application of the electric field and magnetic field, delicate mishybridization such as SNPs can be ripped.
(3) Since the electrodes are positioned on both sides of sites so that the sites are sandwiched by the electrodes, not in the position of each site as seen in conventional methods or equipment, the target DNA is not unevenly adsorbed into the probe DNA at the specific site. The target DNA can also be moved uniformly in the direction of site arrangement over the entire sites, and ineffective adsorption of target DNA is not generated.
(4) Since only a small number of electrodes is needed (at least two electrodes suffice) even if there are many sites, this method or equipment is cheap, compact and has a simple construction and also high reliability is assured.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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JP 2002-359034 | Dec 2002 | JP | national |
This application is the division of the U.S. Application of 10/730,061 dated Dec. 9, 2003.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10730061 | Dec 2003 | US |
Child | 11402943 | Apr 2006 | US |