This invention relates to methods and apparatus for partitioning examination slides.
Microarray technology is known to be useful in monitoring levels of gene expression. Microarrays include regions of either different polynucleotides or antibodies arranged in a predetermined configuration and bound on a substrate. These regions are positioned at specific locations on the substrate. In a typical experiment, a sample of total RNA, mRNA, or proteins are collected from two individuals or under two treatment conditions. In use, when exposed to a sample from an individual or a under a specific treatment condition, the array will exhibit an observed binding pattern of the cDNA (mRNAs reverse transcribed) or proteins to the bound DNA or antibodies, respectively. A basic principle of the microarray is the differential labeling of two samples (e.g., by radio-labeling or fluorescent dyes) and observing the intensities of each sample at each location in the microarray. Using this technique, an investigator can determine whether specific genes are upregulated or downregulated in various individuals and under various treatment conditions. By using a single reference sample as a control for a series of experimental samples, the investigator can compare relative levels of expression among the treatment samples.
In one format, microarray analysis is conducted on an examination slide, such as microscope slide or a diagnostic plate. Such examination slides generally are made from clear glass or plastic, but may be made of other materials. For higher throughput studies, an investigator will conduct several microarray assays on a single microscope slide. Under such circumstances, however, with ordinary manipulation and processing of the slide during the microarray process, liquid from one sample on the slide may spill over or migrate, and mix with another sample on the slide. Accordingly, various barriers have been developed to prevent contamination between multiple samples on a microarray slide. Known products for separating samples on a slide include rubber gaskets, with or without adhesive, hydrophobic markers known as PAP pens, and manufactured barriers such as Teflon®. There are problems with these products, however: gaskets without adhesive do not seal well; when gasket adhesive is used, it can be dissolved by solvents and interfere with experiments; hydrophobic pens are tedious, difficult to use accurately, and dissolve in certain detergents and solvents; and manufactured barriers are expensive and inflexible. Also, gaskets need to be removed before scanning in a typical laser scanner (and some slide coatings will peel off when the gasket is removed). Microarray scanners commonly have clearance for the slide and sample of approximately 250 micrometers.
These and other features, advantages, and objects of the present invention will be further understood and appreciated by those skilled in the art by reference to the following specification, claims and appended drawings.
In one embodiment, the present invention is an apparatus for placing a hydrophobic barrier on an examination slide. The apparatus includes: a vessel and a printer block having a printing surface configured to carry hydrophobic liquid to form a hydrophobic barrier on the examination slide in a specified pattern, wherein the printer block is moveable between a first position in which the printing surface is in the hydrophobic liquid in the vessel, and a second position in which the printing surface is out of the vessel. The apparatus of the invention also includes a slide holder for holding the examination slide adjacent to the printing surface when the printer block is in the second position, and a reversible actuator for moving the printer block between the first position and the second position. Because some hydrophobic liquids are in solid phase at room temperature, in one embodiment, a heater is provided to maintain the hydrophobic liquid in liquid phase during application of the hydrophobic barrier to the examination slide.
In another embodiment, the present invention is a method for making an examination slide having defined sample areas, including the steps of: (a) obtaining an examination slide, a hydrophobic liquid, and an apparatus for placing hydrophobic liquid on the examination slide to define sample areas, the apparatus having a vessel for the hydrophobic liquid, a printer block having a printing surface formed in a specified pattern, wherein the printer block is moveable between a first position with the printing surface of the printer block in the hydrophobic liquid and a second position in which the printing surface is out of the vessel, a slide holder for holding the examination slide adjacent to the printing surface when the printing block is in the second position, and a reversible actuator for moving the printer block between the first position and the second position; (b) placing the hydrophobic liquid in the vessel and the printer block in the first position; (c) placing the examination slide in the slide holder; (d) engaging the actuator to move the printer block from the first position to the second position, thus carrying the hydrophobic liquid on the printing surface of the printer block and transferring the hydrophobic liquid from the printing surface to the examination slide in the specified pattern; and (e) removing the examination slide from the slide holder. If the hydrophobic liquid used by the investigator is in solid phase at room temperature, the apparatus also includes a heater, and the method includes obtaining a heater for use with the apparatus and applying heat to the vessel to convert the hydrophobic liquid from a solid to a liquid phase.
The present invention may be understood more readily by reference to the following detailed description of specific embodiments set forth hereinafter.
As used in the application: “a” can mean one or more, depending on the context with which it is used; the term “oligonucleotide” refers to primers, probes, and oligomer fragments; the term “antibody” refers to monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies; the term “liquid” refers to a liquid material or a liquid biological sample (e.g., blood, urine, plasma, or other bodily fluids) which material is in liquid phase at room temperature or can be maintained in liquid phase by the application of heat; the term “hydrophobic” refers to water resistant or water repellent; the term “examination slide” refers to any type of planar diagnostic plate used in microscopic or diagnostic analysis and can have any shape suitable for use in analytic devices.
Referring to
Printer block 30 is moveable by a reversible actuator 40 from a first position (
Lever arm 42 has a top end 60 and a bottom end 62, and also includes a handle 64. Handle 64 has an aperture 66 and handle 64 is attached to top end 60 of lever arm 42 by a handle bolt 68. Cover slot 25 of right vessel cover 24 allows lever arm 42 to extend out of vessel 12 (
Both lever arm 42 and pivot member 44 are fixedly attached to axel 46 such that movement of lever arm 42 moves pivot member 44. As shown in
Slide holder 22 includes a step channel 70 and a stop 72 (
Examination slide 80 (
Apparatus 10 also includes a guide mechanism 100 to align the printing surface 32 of printer block 30 with the slide holder 22 and the slide top surface 88 of examination slide 80 while printer block 30 is moved from the first position (
Various hydrophobic liquids can be used to fill vessel 12. For example, hydrophobic liquid 20 is wax, paraffin, silicone, or any other polymer that is in solid phase at room temperature but can be liquefied with the application of heat. The hydrophobic liquid selected to create the hydrophobic barrier should be highly resistant to removal by chemicals and physical removal by washing. Such liquids are well known to one of ordinary skill in the art. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, wax is used as hydrophobic liquid 20. At room temperature, the preferred wax is in a solid phase. Accordingly, apparatus 10 also includes a heater 110 below vessel 12. The heater can be any conventional heat source, such as a hot plate made by Fisher Scientific. As shown in
Printing surface 32 of printer block 30 can be configured in a variety of specified patterns to create a variety of complementary hydrophobic barriers 120 on examination slide 80. Referring to
The hydrophobic barrier 120 placed on the examination slide 80 using the apparatus and/or method of the present invention preferably is unaffected by the detergents and solvents used in various steps of the microarray protocol, and the height of the hydrophobic barrier 120 does not impede scanning of the examination slide 80 in a microarray scanner. In a more preferred embodiment, the height of hydrophobic barrier 120 is less than 250 micrometers.
The present invention permits multiple assays to be run on a single examination slide with minimal risk of contamination between assays. Specifically, when multiple liquid samples (not shown) are each separately placed in the examination wells 122 of the examination slide 80 for analysis, the hydrophobic barrier 120 prevents leakage or migration of the sample liquid from one examination well 122 to another examination well 122 on the examination slide 80, retaining each sample in a discrete, well-defined area on the examination slide 80 and preventing contamination between the samples. Further, because of the control permitted when using a slide made by the apparatus or method of the present invention, the volume contained by the examination wells 122 can be uniform among the examination wells on an examination slide.
A preferred embodiment of the method of the present invention includes obtaining hydrophobic liquid 20 and placing hydrophobic liquid 20 into vessel 12 of apparatus 10. The method further includes obtaining an examination slide appropriately sized for use in connection with slide holder 22 of apparatus 10. The size of examination slide 80 is well known to one of ordinary skill in the art, having a length, width, and thickness of a conventional microscope slide. An operator places slide rear end 84 of examination slide 80 onto step channel shelves 78 with top surface 88 of slide 80 facing toward printing surface 32 of printing block 30. The examination slide 80 then is slid into slide holder 22 toward rear vessel wall 16 until examination slide rear end 84 is stopped by stop 72 of slide holder 22. So positioned, examination slide 80 rests within slide holder 22 with examination slide front end 82 projecting forwardly from front end 90 of slide holder 22 (
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the hydrophobic liquid 20 is a wax composition naturally occurring in a solid phase at room temperature. Accordingly, in this embodiment, the operator activates heater 110 by heater control 112 such that hydrophobic liquid 20 is converted from a solid phase to a liquid phase before the operator initiates actuation of actuator 40. Once the operator has transferred the hydrophobic liquid from the printing surface 32 of the printer block 30 to slide top surface 88 of examination slide 80, the hydrophobic liquid 20 returns to room temperature and cures into a solid phase. The operator then can withdraw the examination slide 80 from slide holder 22. After the examination slide 80 is removed from the slide holder 22, the operator moves lever arm 42 back to its position adjacent rear vessel wall 16, thereby returning printer block 30 to the first position (
An operator may print DNA or antibody microarrays on examination slide 80 before or after placing a hydrophobic barrier 120 on the examination slide. Frequently, the microarrays are printed on a nitrocellulose pad on top surface 88 of slide 80 (not shown). Further, for example, each array in an examination well could include 96 antibodies specific to proteins of interest, printed in triplicate on the top surface 88 of the examination slide 80. Each examination well 122 could accommodate up to several thousand spots of DNA or antibodies. If DNA or antibodies are printed on the examination slide after placing the hydrophobic barriers on the slide, then the particular apparatus used to print the DNA or antibodies must be considered. Specifically, in a typical apparatus for printing DNA or antibodies on a slide, one or more printer pins are mounted above the examination slide and there is a gap (e.g., 500 micrometers) between the tips of the printer pins and the top surface of the slide. Thus, when DNA or antibodies are printed on the slide after the hydrophobic barriers are placed on the slide, in order to avoid interference with the printer pins of the DNA or antibody printing apparatus, the height of the hydrophobic barrier on the examination plate must be shorter than the gap between the tips of the printer pins and slide top surface.
In one embodiment of the method of the present invention, an operator prints an array (not shown) on top surface 88 of slide 80 and thereafter inserts the examination slide 80 into slide holder 22 with top surface 88 of the examination slide 80 facing downwardly toward printing surface 32 of printer block 30. In this manner, using apparatus 10, the hydrophobic barrier 120 will be placed around the printed arrays, creating a separate examination well for each array. Further, the operator can create examination slides having varying numbers of examination wells, depending upon the specified pattern of the printing surface 32 of printer block 30. For example, the printer block shown in
The apparatus and method of the present invention also can be automated or robotic, rather than manual, including apparatus components and method steps to automate any of the following: (a) insertion/removal of the examination slide into the slide holder; (b) moving the printer block carrying hydrophobic liquid on the printing surface toward the examination slide to lay down the hydrophobic barrier in a specified pattern; and (c) simultaneously loading samples into each of the examination wells on an examination slide (e.g., twelve wells on an examination slide would be simultaneously filled with twelve different samples).
An example for using an examination slide made according to the apparatus and method of the present invention includes testing blood serum from cancer patients in which proteins in the serum have been radio labeled. A treatment or control sample “A” and a reference sample “B” are loaded into a single examination well by micropipetting. Because of the hydrophobic barriers on the examination slide, samples from several patients or several treatment conditions can be assayed in adjacent examination wells on a single examination slide with very little risk of contamination between the different samples on the slide. After loading the samples on the examination slide, the examination slide is incubated so the proteins in sample A and the proteins in sample B can competitively bind to the antibodies printed in each examination well on the examination slide. The examination slide is then washed to remove reagents and unbound proteins, and the slide is scanned to detect the relative abundance of proteins in each sample in each examination well.
It will be understood by those who practice the invention and those of ordinary skill in the art that various modifications and improvements may be made to the invention without departing from the spirit of the disclosed concept. The scope of protection afforded is to be determined by the claims and the breadth of interpretation allowed by the law.
This application claims benefit of provisional application Ser. No. 60/611,585, filed Sep. 21, 2004, entitled METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR MAKING PARTITIONED SLIDES, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60611585 | Sep 2004 | US |