This application relates to the invention described in Attorney Docket Number FIS920020186US1, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Technical Field
The field of the invention is that of simultaneously testing many compounds for biological/chemical interactions. In particular, the current invention is a device/structure and a method to test drug interactions.
In order to improve the efficiency of drug discovery, leading pharmaceutical companies have implemented high; throughput screening (HTS) techniques for the evaluation of potential drug candidates. In high throughput screening, a reagent set A (for example, a biological target with appropriate assay reagents) is tested for reactivity with chemicals B1-Bn (for example, compounds taken from a molecular library), where n can be a large number, on the order of millions. High-throughput screening can enable the testing of large numbers of compounds rapidly and in parallel. Current efforts are standardized around the use of plastic consumables known as microtiter plates, or microplates. A set of substances B1-Bn can be arrayed in these microplates, and then reagent set A, which could include chemicals that test for the interaction with a specific biological target, can be mixed with each of the Bn. Detector instrumentation, for example, optical microplate readers, can then be used to detect interactions.
The pharmaceutical industry currently has a need for improvements in high-throughput-screening technology to improve drug-discovery efficiency and to keep costs down. Reagents and compounds used in drug discovery are often scarce and expensive, which has prompted the development of miniaturized assays with smaller assay volumes. Microtiter plates are commercially available in a variety of standard well formats (e.g. 96;- 384, and 1536 wells per plate), with well dimensions typically on the order of a few to several millimeters. Assays performed in these plates typically use in excess of ten microliters of reagent per test point. These types of reactions could theoretically be performed with sub-microliter volumes of reagents, but to date such low-volume assays have not achieved widespread adoption. One significant factor inhibiting the adoption of low-volume assays is the lack of methods for reliable high-performance fluid delivery.
Recently, Autonomous Microfluidic Capillary System David Juncker, Heinz Schmid, Ute Drechsler, Heiko Wolf, Marc Wolf, Bruno Michel, Nico de Rooij, and Emmanuel Delamarche, Anal. Chem.; 2002; 74(24) pp 6139-6144; has described a specific design concept to regulate the flow of multiple reagents in a capillary-driven microstructure. In this concept, the flow of a reagent is initiated by its delivery to a service port and then terminates when the fluid has drained to the point where the trailing meniscus has reached an element known as a capillary retention valve. Flow rates during this phase can be controlled by engineering the geometry and surface characteristics of the microstructure.
The art has been able to provide some control over the position of the liquid in a microstructure, but the user is required to deposit the correct amount of fluid into the service port, with a high degree of accuracy. One of the difficulties in moving to smaller and smaller amounts of liquid is the ability to meter out precise quantities of liquid for delivery into the service port using conventional means. A method is needed whereby the microstructure can actually improve the delivery of fluid instead of merely acting as a receiver.
The invention relates to a device with micro wells and micro channels and a method for formation thereof.
In one aspect of the invention, the open wells and channels are formed by individual layer personalization.
In another aspect of the invention, the array comprises U-shaped channels with vertical branches having different diameters.
In another aspect of the invention, fluid delivery in the channels is controlled with engineered geometries in the channels.
In another aspect of the invention, fluid delivery is controlled by parameters of various surfaces and/or surface features like roughness.
In another aspect of the invention, self-metering of fluid volume is achieved by use of differential capillary forces.
Another feature of the invention is the use of a sacrificial material that escapes from the ceramic structure during the sintering process.
Another aspect of the invention is the control of the channel volume during sintering process.
Another aspect of the invention is a set of methods for reacting reagents in such a device.
Another aspect of the invention is a set of methods for delivering reagents and materials to surfaces using such a device.
Another aspect of the invention is a method of metering the delivery of reagents into such a device.
Card 100 fits into holder 10, which positions it, has available vacuum and pressure for fluid control and adapts to a robotic material handling apparatus.
One novel example of the use of U-shaped geometries to help achieve reproducible microfluidic device performance stems from their ability to help prevent the introduction of undesired bubbles into the active device regions of a microfluidic structure.
The invention takes advantage of microfluidic separation by gravity, relying on the fact that bubbles that are introduced at the input of a device will float up to the top. So a geometry that allows bubbles to float to the top and where the bubble-free fluid can then be directed downward to the active device areas assists in excluding bubbles from active regions. The use of U-shaped structures is one method to prevent bubble incorporation into the microchannel. Other methods such as size-exclusion filters can be implemented in conjunction with this approach to assist in the removal of bubbles from specified areas.
The lamination process involves heat, pressure and time. The preferred lamination pressure is under 800 psi, the temperature is under 90 deg C. and for a time of less than 5 minutes. The sintering process involves the material of choice and the binder system used to form the greensheets.
The sintering process could include temperatures less than 2000C, and can be isostatic, free, and/or conformal. The ambient includes air, nitrogen, hydrogen, steam, carbon dioxide, and any combinations thereof.
The diameter of channels used in fabrication will depend on the particular application and technical variables such as the viscosity of the substance passing through, the surface tension/activity of the surface and fluid, desired flow force, capillary or forced flow, desired quantity and rate of flow, etc.
According to one example of the invention, the greensheets are formed from a substance such as alumina, glass, ceramic and glass and ceramic, referred to as ceramic greensheets. The technique for forming vertical apertures and horizontal channels is material removal by mechanical techniques such as punching the material out, laser drilling, e-beam drilling, sandblasting and high pressure liquid jets. Some applications may employ channels formed by non-material-removal techniques such as embossing, pressing, forming, and casting.
In one embodiment of the invention, the layer that contains the bottom surface of the horizontal channel 126 has the bottom surface of the channel adapted for holding sample material, e.g. reaction products. The surface may have a minimum roughness (of less than 1 micron, say) and/or be shaped with a depression to contain the material during handling. In addition, the layer should be adapted for high speed scanning, e.g. be thin enough to fit in conventional scanners, have the cells placed close enough together to minimize time spent traveling from one to another, etc.
Preferably, the layer containing the top surface 125 upon which reaction products will deposit (and that forms the bottom of the U-shaped structure) is removable; i.e. it adheres to the upper layers well enough to keep the fluids from leaking, but can easily be separated from the upper layers. The method of attachment may be any known in the art, e.g. heat, tape, a pressure-sensitive sealant, or silk-screening a sealing material.
In operation, a reagent is inserted (using a pipette for example) in aperture 122, then is attracted by the increased capillary force caused by the decrease in diameter down to passage 121. The reagent is drawn in for a set time after which the dispensing pipette is withdrawn.
When the reagent reaches the bottom of passage 121, it travels horizontally until it reaches passage 123, where it rises up to a level that may be influenced by various means described below.
Referring to
One embodiment provides a flow-resistance element to control the rate of fluid extraction. In typical use, the external fluid reservoir would be filled with an amount of liquid in excess to that amount actually required. By bringing the fluid in the pipette tip into contact with the microfluidic device, flow is initiated. The flow rate is regulated by the flow-restriction element, so the desired volume can be achieved by controlling the amount of time that the pipette tip interacts with the microfluidic device. The pipette tip can then be removed from proximity with the microfluidic card to terminate the metering operation. The fluid will then flow until it has self-positioned itself with its trailing meniscus at the position known as the capillary retention valve (CRV) denoted by numeral 820 where a restricted diameter operates to resist further flows.
In
Lastly,
The operation has been shown with a single vertical aperture for simplicity, but the U-shaped structure of
One area where these techniques are applicable is in the area of reagent storage. Useful reagent storage (whether for minutes or months) at small volumes is complicated by the difficulty of controlling the positioning of fluid within the storage container. When there is poor control over initial positioning of stored reagents, subsequent reactions of these reagents with additional reactants are not well controlled. According to the invention, microfluidic structures with integrated capillary-retention valves may be used for reagent storage. Using this method, reagents can be applied to the inlet port of a microstructure with relatively low precision, but can then be precisely driven by capillary action to move fluid to a predetermined position within the microstructure.
Referring again to
The rinsing of fluids is an important step in many biochemical protocols. However, achieving reproducible rinsing at low liquid volumes is difficult-commercially, an inherently large footprint per test is currently required to achieve good results. The ability to perform multiple fluid rinses in a small footprint would be advantageous and a method to do so within a microstructure has been demonstrated in the literature. However, in that instance, a separate secondary structure is needed in order to enable fluid extraction (which drives the rinse process by a capillary-flow mechanism) from the primary fluid-processing microstructure. This requirement for a secondary component adds undesired complexity (e.g. alignment requirements) to practical implementations. According to the invention, a fully-integrated structure is able to perform rinsing and to enable multistep assays by using multilayer structures to significantly increase the volume of the attached capillary-driven flow-promotion zone (esp. in the third dimension). Illustratively, an optional feature of
This method allows for a small overall footprint, enables low-volume assays that are heterogeneous in nature, and helps to prevent spillover of unwanted reagent in the event that the microfluidic structure is composed of multiple parts and needs to be separated.
Similar microfluidic methods and structures can be used to precisely deliver biological cells and other non-fluid entities (such as beads or nanoparticles) carried in a non-homogenous fluid to a substrate. The substrate can, for example, be a wall of an assembled structure which can then be disassembled to allow substrate-specific processing. Also, reagents can be delivered to any such entities (e.g. cells, beads, nanoparticles, etc) that have been attached to a surface of the microchannel in an earlier step. As one example, culture media with biological cells can be delivered to a microstructure and positioned through the use of a capillary-retention valve. The biological cells can then settle to the bottom surface 125 of the microstructure (channel 126) in a predictable manner, where they are then to able attach themselves in a process similar to that found in conventional cell culture. Subsequent rinse and reagent application steps can then be used to perform valuable cell-based assays.
Conventional methods for low-volume reagent handling are generally very wasteful of reagents. This becomes especially problematic when a reagent is expensive and/or in short supply. Structures according to the invention use a microstructure with a height that is typically a reduced multiple of the diffusion constant (which must be at least roughly known) to minimize reagent that cannot interact with the surface. Additionally it provides for a designed flow using the techniques described above, such that in approximately the amount of time it takes for reagents to be depleted near the surface, a fresh supply of reagent can be introduced. This can be either continuous or quantized flow (periods of flow separated by periods when flow is stopped), but the design is intended to allow the most efficient application of reagent in the shortest time. The invention also includes use of microfluidic structures to write lines and spots in which a projecting drop such as 655 in
Referring now to
In
In contrast, as shown in
The parameters have been chosen such that the diffusion distances of the reagents permit the reactants to reach one another.
Referring now to
Numeral 55 represents a ledge that holds the microplate. Numeral 52 denotes a large aperture that exposes the array of wells to operations implemented from below. Tubes 42 and 44 represent gas and vacuum lines. At the corners, boxes 120 represent position sensors for the measurement of alignment of the microplate.
The dotted line 75 at the bottom represents an optional lower lens array.
A distribution/operation system can be used to process the microfluidic arrays. In
The plate being processed could have wells that only use one of the two options (or could have a standard array with only half the wells being used for this particular operation). Alternatively, the frame 150 could be translated by the actuators (with the plate optionally being lifted vertically to slide without making contact with the lower array), so that in a first operation, half the wells are processed by circles 77, say, the plate is translated and, in the second operation, the second half of the wells are processed. The two-step process could then be repeated using the devices represented by the rectangles. Alternatively, a first half of the array could be processed with both the circles and rectangles and then the second half.
Referring to
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the reagent can be urged against the reacting surface (or other reagents in the form of non-homogeneous substances such as microparticles, microbeads, nanoparticles or biological cells) by the application of an external force such as gravity, electrophoretic force or electroosmotic force.
While the invention has been described in terms of a single preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced in various versions within the spirit and scope of the following claims.