The following generally relates to a sample carrier and/or a sample carrier processing apparatus configured to process one or more samples carried by the sample carrier, and more particularly to moving a fluid (e.g., a sample, a processing material, etc.) through a channel of the sample carrier via direct displacement for processing the sample by the sample carrier processing apparatus.
Micro channel devices include, but are not limited to, devices which carry one or more small samples for processing and/or analysis by a sample processing apparatus. Such devices have included, for each sample, a plurality of processing regions, processing material chambers, micro-fluidic channels, valves, etc., and such apparatuses have included a plurality of processing stations for processing samples. One or more samples carried by a micro channel device are moved through the micro channel device, in series or parallel, via the micro-fluidic channels of the device from processing station to processing station of the sample processing apparatus, where the one or more samples are processed, with each of the samples being sequentially processed by corresponding processing regions using the processing materials from the chambers.
One approach for moving the samples and/or the processing materials in a micro channel device includes using a pressurized gas. Such a gas can be delivered by a compressor, a tank holding pressurized air, an air mover, and/or other source of pressurized gas through pneumatic valves sequenced by a controller or processor of the sample processing system. Unfortunately, such a micro channel device can be highly complex. For example, with such an approach, a multi-channel micro channel device may require hundreds of valves, which need to be synchronized, and corresponding valve lines to open and close the valves. Furthermore, there is no guarantee that the pressure applied actually moves a sample and/or processing material to its destination within the device. Moreover, there is no easy way to accurately track the movement and location of a sample and/or processing material as it moves though the device.
Aspects of the application address the above matters, and others.
In one aspect, a sample carrier for carrying one or more samples to be processed by a sample processing apparatus includes at least one sample processing channel, the channel including a first region configured to carry a first fluid and at least a second region, wherein the first fluid in the first region is moved to the second region via compression of the first region.
In another aspect, a sample processing apparatus for processing samples carried by sample carriers including at least one raised vessel carrying at least one a sample or a processing material includes a sample carrier receiving region configured to receive the sample carriers and a displacer configured to apply physical pressure to the raised vessel which causes compression of the raised vessel, thereby moving a fluid in the raised vessel to another region of the sample carrier for at least one of mixing or processing by the at least one processing component.
In another aspect, a method includes controllably moving a fluid in a sample carrier via compression during DNA analysis.
Those skilled in the art will recognize still other aspects of the present application upon reading and understanding the attached description.
The application is illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings, in which like references indicate similar elements and in which:
In the illustrated embodiment, the processing apparatus 100 is configured for DNA, enzymatic, protein, and/or other processing and/or analysis of at least one or more bio-sample located on the sample carrier 102. In another embodiment, the sample processing apparatus 100 is configured to process other bio-samples and/or non bio-samples on the sample carrier 102. An example of a suitable sample carrier 102 includes, but is not limited to, a biochip, a lab-on-a-chip, and/or other sample carrier.
The illustrated sample carrier 102 includes one or more sample regions 106 for carrying a sample to be processed, and one or more processing regions 108 for processing the one or more samples in the one or more sample regions 106. The sample carrier 102 further includes one or more processing agent regions 110 which carry one or more processing materials or agents 112 used to facilitate processing samples. The sample carrier 102 further includes one or more mixing regions 114 and/or one or moving regions 116 respectively for mixing a sample and an agent and/or one or more agents, and moving a sample, an agent, or a combination thereof in the sample carrier 102.
As described in greater detail below, at least one of the regions 106, 108, 110, 114, or 116 is configured as a raised vessel that is at least partially raised above a surface of the sample carrier 102. A fluid in such a vessel can be displaced or moved out of the vessel and to another portion of the sample carrier 102 by applying a suitable pressure, generally in a direction toward the sample carrier 102, to the raised portion of the vessel, which causes the vessel to compress and/or collapse towards the sample carrier 102, pushing the fluid out of an opposing side of the vessel, which is in fluid communication with other portions of the sample carrier 102 such that the fluid can move to the other portions of the sample carrier 102. With a moving vessel, the vessel is similarly compressed; however, the fluid remains therein and is solely used to move fluid out of another region.
The sample apparatus 100 includes one or more processing stations 120. Where configured for DNA analysis, such the processing stations 120 are configured to process one or more DNA samples in different lanes or channels of the sample carrier 102. In this instance, the processing stations 120 are configured to perform at least such functions as extract and purify DNA fragments, replicate and label the fragments with fluorescent dyes having known emission spectrums (or colors), separate the labeled fragments based on fragment size, for example, via electrophoresis, scan the fragments, and determine allele numbers for the DNA samples.
The sample processing apparatus 100 also includes a fluid displacer 122. As described in greater detail below, the fluid displacer 122 is configured to controllably apply suitable pressure to the raised vessel of at least one of the regions 106, 108, 110, 114, or 116 for moving the fluid held therein. This allows for moving samples and/or processing materials in the sample carrier 102 without using external pneumatics and/or external pneumatic valves, which may simplify the sample carrier 102 and reduce the cost thereof. In the illustrated embodiment, a drive system 124 drives the fluid displacer 122. The drive system 124 may include an AC or DC motor (e.g., linear, stepper, etc.), a drive (e.g., a ball screw, a lead screw, gears, a belt, a chain, a piston, etc.), and an encoder for tracking the position of the drive and/or the fluid displacer 122, directly and/or via the motor.
A controller 126 controls the drive system 124 and the one or more processing components 120. The illustrated controller 126 includes one or more processors that execute one or more computer readable instructions encoded on computer readable storage medium such as physical memory. Additionally or alternatively, at least one of the instructions can be carried by a carrier wave or signal. A user interface 128 provides an interactive user interface for presenting information to and/or receiving commands from a user of the sample processing apparatus 100 via buttons, knobs, a stylist, a digital pen, a mouse, a keypad, a keyboard, an audible command, etc.
Generally, the one or more vessels include fluid to be mixed, moved, combined, processed, etc. and can be thought of as formable blisters or bubbles of plastic or the like that stick above the surface of the sample carrier 102 and can be compressed to move fluid by direct displacement. In operation, the fluid displacer 122 comes along with sufficient force to compress and squash the one or more vessels, for example, in a linear fashion, to displace the fluid therein. As the fluid moves in the carrier 102, the location of the fluid can be determined based on the position of the fluid displacer 122, and the fluid can be mixed or combined with other fluids and/or unknowns to complete an experiment and quantify results. The controller 126 can accurately synchronize the sequence (e.g., the timing and logical flow) of fluid flow, and execution and lack of complex control elements renders a reliable and robust system.
In the illustrated embodiment, the processing apparatus 100 is configured to be a hand-held, portable apparatus that can be readily carried by an operator. In this configuration, the processing apparatus 100 can be carried and employed at the location where the sample is collected, if desired, or elsewhere. In this configuration, the processing apparatus 100 may also be configured such the operator can operate it with one hand. In another embodiment, the processing apparatus 100 is configured to be a stationary apparatus mounted to or placed on a table, the floor, etc. in a laboratory, office, or the like. In such a configuration, the processing apparatus 100 may be configured to remain at a particular location and process sample carriers 102 loaded therein.
Initially referring to
The illustrated vessel 200 can represent any of the regions 106, 108, 110, or 114. Where the vessel 200 is a sample region 106, the vessel may include an ingress port for loading the sample in the vessel 200. Furthermore, the illustrated vessel 200 is disposed on the sample carrier 102 such that the second or fluid releasing sub-portion 208 of the vessel 200 is next to and/or is a side covering an opening of the region 106, 108, 110, or 114. The raised vessel 200 can be part of a separate layer (in roll form) attached to the sample carrier 102 or part of the same layer as the regions the region 106, 108, 110, or 114. Generally, the sample carrier 102 can be composed of one or more layers, with via or the like providing pathways between the one or more layers.
The raised sub-portion 202 is generally compressible and collapsible under first predetermined pressure by the fluid displacer 122. Under the same pressure, the fluid releasing sub-portion 208 is generally breakable, tearable or otherwise openable such that the fluid 210 in the raised vessel 200 can be displaced and egress out of the raised vessel 200. In the illustrated configuration, the fluid 210 is displaced out of the raised vessel 200 and into the region 108, 110, or 114. In another instance, displacing fluid out of the raised vessel 200 removes the fluid from the sample carrier 102.
In the illustrated embodiment, the raised vessel 200 has a hemisphere shape and the region 108, 110, or 114 has parallelepiped shape. However, the illustrated shapes (and relative sizes) are provided for explanatory purposes and are not limiting. As such, other three dimensional shape are contemplated herein. By way of non-limiting example, the raised vessel 200 can have parallelepiped shape and the region 108, 110, or 114 can have a hemisphere shape, the shapes of both the raised vessel 200 and the regions 108, 110, or 114 can be the same, etc.
The illustrated fluid displacer 122 includes a roller or rotatable drum 212 that is moved via a ball screw 214 driven by a linear stepper motor 230. More particularly, in the illustrated example, a first end region 218 of a support member 220 is affixed at a side 222 of the drum 212 at a rotational axis 224 that extends along a longitudinal axis of the drum 212. An opposing end region 226 of the support member 220 is affixed to a threaded ball screw nut 228 of the ball screw 214. The motor 230 is configured to rotate a threaded shaft 232 of the ball screw 214, which in turns translates ball screw nut 228, and hence the drum 214 along the a direction of the shaft 232.
The drum 212 is in physical contact with the surface 204 of the sample carrier 102 and moves across the surface 204. The motor 230 drives the shaft 232, under control of the controller 126, such that a force exerted by the drum 212 when the drum 212 physically contacts the raised sub-portion 202 of the raised vessel 200 the drum compresses and collapses the raised sub-portion 202, collapsing it towards the surface 204, pushing the fluid in the raised vessel 202 into the region 108, 110, or 114. As shown, in this embodiment, the collapsed sub-portion 202 remains in a substantially collapsed position after the cylindrical drum 210 passes the raised vessel 202. It is to be understood that the displacer 122 illustrated and discussed in this example is not limiting and is provided for explanatory purposes.
The combination of
In
In this example, sides 502 and 504 of the raised vessel 2001 are generally compressible and collapsible sides (similar to side 202 of
The raised hollow channel 508 provides a fluid pathway to the second raised vessel 2002. In the illustrated embodiment, the vessel 2002 is open to the channel 508. With such an embodiment, the channel 508 and the vessel 2002 may be separate component or parts of the same component. In another embodiment, a fluid releasing side (like sides 208 and 506) is disposed between the channel 508 and the vessel 2002.
Similar to that of
In
The flexible or elastic second portion 802A expands under the pressure from drum 212 but does not open like the side 208. Instead, in response to the drum 212 collapsing the vessel 2002, the fluid in the vessel 2002 moves the flexible or elastic second portion 802A into the region 108, 110, or 114, displacing the fluid there from. This is shown in
At 902, pressure is applied to a raised vessel of a sample carrier.
At 904, the pressure causes the raise vessel to compress towards the sample carrier.
At 906, a side of the vessel facing a mixing or processing region 114 or 108, in response to the pressure, opens, allowing fluid in the vessel to egress therefrom.
At 908, a fluid in the vessel, in response to the pressure, is displaced from the vessel and into the mixing or processing region 114 or 108.
At 910, the above acts are repeated one or more times to move the fluid to another region of the sample carrier.
The application has been described with reference to various embodiments. Modifications and alterations will occur to others upon reading the application. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations, including insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims and the equivalents thereof.