WO1996030760A1 - Method for identifying biologically active substances by their effect on living cells - Google Patents

Method for identifying biologically active substances by their effect on living cells Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1996030760A1
WO1996030760A1 PCT/DK1996/000133 DK9600133W WO9630760A1 WO 1996030760 A1 WO1996030760 A1 WO 1996030760A1 DK 9600133 W DK9600133 W DK 9600133W WO 9630760 A1 WO9630760 A1 WO 9630760A1
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WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
flow chamber
matrix
cells
chamber
wall
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/DK1996/000133
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Ole Thastrup
Kurt Scudder
Jaromir Ruzicka
Original Assignee
Novo Nordisk A/S
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Novo Nordisk A/S filed Critical Novo Nordisk A/S
Priority to AU51430/96A priority Critical patent/AU5143096A/en
Priority to EP96908028A priority patent/EP0817965A1/en
Priority to JP8528816A priority patent/JPH11504507A/en
Publication of WO1996030760A1 publication Critical patent/WO1996030760A1/en

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/5005Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells
    • G01N33/5008Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics
    • G01N33/502Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics for testing non-proliferative effects
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M25/00Means for supporting, enclosing or fixing the microorganisms, e.g. immunocoatings
    • C12M25/16Particles; Beads; Granular material; Encapsulation
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12MAPPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
    • C12M41/00Means for regulation, monitoring, measurement or control, e.g. flow regulation
    • C12M41/46Means for regulation, monitoring, measurement or control, e.g. flow regulation of cellular or enzymatic activity or functionality, e.g. cell viability
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/5005Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells
    • G01N33/5008Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics

Definitions

  • the invention relates to the technique of identifying biologically active substances and to be more specific to identification by the effect of the substance on living cells.
  • biologically active compounds include, but are not limited to, drugs, insecticides, pesticides, and herbicides.
  • the practice of screening large libraries of samples of unknown composition for the few which may contain a compound of specific biological activity is one of the more common methods of new drug discovery.
  • the samples of unknown composition are in most cases biological material, such as plant extracts or microbial fermentation broths. Screening these for biological activity is normally accomplished by performing binding assays or, more recently, functional assays.
  • binding assay is an attempt to find compounds of interest by identifying those which adhere with a minimum degree of affinity to cells or cell products. This can be done using fluorescent, luminescent, or radioactive detection methods. These assays are based not on a biological response, but a passive process which results from biological activity, namely the generation of specific molecules by biological systems. They cannot be construed as functional assays or as real-time assays.
  • Gene Expression Assays Another way to determine biological activity is to measure up-regulation or down-regulation of expression of a known gene. This is done by inserting DNA which codes for something which can be readily measured into a cell's genome such that the expression of interest is coupled to expression of the inserted DNA. While this is a true functional assay, it also is not a real time assay. In addition, it is only capable of finding compounds which affect gene expression. In many cases this is not the response of interest. Other Functional Assays.
  • the CytoSensor described in US 4 915 812 and US 5 395 503 is a commercial instrument which has been billed as a screening instrument. It is based on the detection of increased cellular proton flux by means of a semiconducting electrode. The instrument is applicable to high through-put screening, but can only detect cellular events that result in changes in extracellular pH. Again, many responses of interest are not associated with changes in extracellular pH.
  • luminescent probes Imaging of cellular functions using luminescent probes. Visualization of intracellular function using luminescent (fluorescent or bioluminescent) probes has become one of the mainstay techniques in modern cell biology. Using traditional optical microscopes with quantitative detectors in place of the human eye, both the concentration and distribution in the cell of a variety of intracellular molecules of interest can be measured. While luminescent probes can be measured in large populations of cells using other techniques, imaging is the only way to learn what is going on in single cells or small populations of cells. It also has the advantage of much higher optical efficiency when compared with traditional spectrophotomethc techniques for measuring optical signals.
  • These cells are ones which have been specifically chosen to exhibit the desired biological behaviour. They may be primary cells cultured from fresh tissue, or they may be genetically engineered cells transfected with one or more genes of interest.
  • the method according to the invention allows monitoring of dynamic cellular responses in living cells, while the cells are attached to a matrix (e.g. microcarrier beads) that can be fluidically controlled. Under continuous flow operation it is possible to obtain very short sample exposure times which make the invention suited to high through-put screening for novel biologically active substances.
  • the method will also find application in the search for rare biological events associated with expression of specific proteins in transfected cell lines.
  • the matrix may be provided as microcarrier beads or as microdroplets of agarose.
  • the method employs detection of cellular signals from cells cultured on the surface of microcarrier beads or encapsulated in microdroplets of agarose gel, the beads/droplets not only providing the support for the cells but also the vehicle for transportation of said cells from tissue culture facilities (incubators) to detection system.
  • the flow chamber is capable of positioning the carriers in a fixed position without the aid of a human operator, and simultaneously allowing visualization through a microscope equipped with a high numerical aperture objective lens.
  • the flushing of the flow chamber may advantageously be a forward flushing.
  • a forward flushing is meant that the flush liquid passes the chamber in the same direction as do the injected matrix carrying flow fluid.
  • a more effective flushing is obtained as the flushing fluid simply displaces the matrix out of the chamber instead of sucking it out.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide an apparatus for use by the method according to the invention.
  • Such an apparatus is characterized in that it comprises a flow chamber having a wall through which the content of said chamber may be monitored, a fluidic handling system for controlled sequential injection of buffer, cell carrying matrix and sample or samples into the flow chamber and for final removing of waste during a flushing of this chamber.
  • the flow chamber of the apparatus may comprise a plane optical surface as a wall through which the content of the chamber may be monitored, a ring shaped wall having an edge adjacent to the plane optical surface leaving a gap between said edge and said optical surface which gap allows liquid but not the matrix to pass.
  • a volume of buffer carrying the matrix beads or droplets When injected into the flow chamber the beads or droplets will be retained on the optical surface whereas the buffer may escape through the gap between this surface and the edge of the ring shaped wall. Injected sample will trickle between the beads or the droplets in close contact with these beads and droplets and escape through the gap.
  • the chamber may be flushed by sucking flushing buffer in through the gap and removing it via the inlet of the chamber until all beads and droplets are flushed away.
  • a quicker flushing may be obtained when the distance between the edge of the ring shaped wall and the plane optical surface may be controlled so that it momentarily allows the matrix beads or microdroplets to pass.
  • This way the flow through the chamber may be made unidirectional and all supplies may be made to the inlet of the chamber and all draining of waste may take place from an area surrounding the inlet.
  • the width of the gap may be changed by electromagnetic means which are controlled to momentarily pull the ring shaped wall and the plane surface away from each other. This makes it easy to control the width of the gap so that it is enlarged during the flushing step of the identification cycle.
  • Figure 1-6 show schematically a diagram of the fluidic system of an apparatus in six successive step positions during the sequence run through when carrying out the method according to the invention
  • Figure 7 shows schematically a sectional view of the flow chamber during the fixation of the matrix at an optical surface of an end wall of the chamber
  • Figure 8 shows the chamber according to figure 7 seen through the end wall of the chamber
  • Figure 9 shows schematically a sectional view of the flow chamber during flushing
  • Figure 10 shows the chamber according to figure 9 seen through the end wall of the chamber.
  • An apparatus for carrying out the identification cycle comprises as shown in figure 1 -6 a flow chamber 1 into which a charge of matrix beads carrying the living cells chosen for the identification is transported and exposed to the sample the influence of which shall be identified.
  • the content of the flow chamber may be observed through a wall 2 of this chamber.
  • the optical portion used for the observation is illustrated by the arrow 3.
  • This optical portion may be a standard microscope equipped for epi-illumination.
  • the light source may be a rapid scanning monochromator which allows switching among selected wavelengths of light for excitation of the fluorescent molecules in the cells in a time scale appropriate for the response being measured.
  • the fluorescence detector may be a photomultiplier, camera, image detector or other with sufficiently fast response to allow the signal to be detected without undersampling of the process. Both the light source and the detector are computer controlled for synchronizing the acquisition of the fluorescence signals with the appropriate excitation wavelength.
  • the fluidic part of the apparatus further comprises a container 4 for a buffer fluid, waste containers 5 and 6 and a container 7 for matrix beads or droplets carrying the living cells.
  • the fluidic part of the apparatus comprises three syringes 8, 9, and 10 which under computer control are sequentially operated to act as pumps providing the driving force which sends liquid through the apparatus in a way which is further controlled by two-way valves 11 , 12, and 13 at the outlet ends of the respective syringes and a multi-way selection valve 14. All valves are controlled by the computer to establish the appropriate connection during the different steps of the process.
  • the selection valve has a main lead 15 which by the different positions of this valve may be connected to one of a number of other leads 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20. The choice of connection is controlled by the computer.
  • Figure 1 shows the first step during which the syringe 8 is loaded with buffer from the container 4 whereas the syringe 9 is empty, i.e. with its piston in its innermost position.
  • the selection valve 14 in its position connecting the main lead 15 to the lead 17 which is connected to the container 7 containing the matrix beads carrying the living cells.
  • the piston of the syringe 8 is pressed inward, as illustrated by the arrow 23 in figure 3, and the valve 11 at the outlet of this syringe 8 is changed to the position connecting this syringe 8 to the main lead 15 of the selection valve 14 which valve itself connects its main lead 15 to the lead 19 leading to the flow chamber 1.
  • the piston is pressed into the syringe 8 its content of buffer liquid is pressed into the coil 21 where it displaces the liquid with suspended matrix beads.
  • This matrix bead carrying liquid is led through the lead 19 to the flow chamber 1 as illustrated by the arrows 25 and 26.
  • the matrix beads are trapped as it will be described below and the buffer liquid carrying the beads flows past and into the waste container 5.
  • the syringe 8 is refilled with buffer from the container 4 before proceeding to the fourth step.
  • the piston of the syringe 8 is drawn out and the selection valve provides a connection to the lead 16 which is inserted into a sample 27 which shall be tested. Therefore, when the piston of the syringe 9 is drawn outward, the sample is sucked into the coil 21 as illustrated by the arrows 29 and 30, and by the fifth step shown in figure 5 the sample is propelled to the flow chamber 1 by pressing in the piston of syringe 8 as shown by an arrow 31.
  • the selection valve connects the main lead 15 with the lead 19 leading to the flow chamber 1.
  • the syringe 8 is again filled with buffer liquid from the container 4.
  • Figure 6 illustrates the sixth and last step of the process during which step the selection valve is moved to make connection to the lead 20 which may be connected to a waste container not shown.
  • the piston of syringe 10 is moved rapidly outward, aspirating liquid from the waste container 5 through the flow chamber in the reverse direction and into the syringe 10 as illustrated by the arrows 33 and 34.
  • the valve 13 is in the opposite position of the position shown in figure 6.
  • the valve 13 is turned to the position shown in figure 6 and the piston of the syringe 10 is moved inward to dispense the content of the syringe 10 into the waste container 6 as shown by the arrow 35.
  • the syringe 9 is emptied through the selector valve 14 into the not shown waste container connected to the lead 20.
  • the row of samples is conveyed one step forward so that not the sample 27 but the sample 28 is conducted into the flow chamber and so on until a sufficient number of cycles have been performed to test all the samples in the row. As it is seen the whole detecting process may be carried out automatically.
  • valves and syringes may be varied and modified widely without deviating from the scope of the invention. Also, the construction of the flow chamber may be varied from that which is described below.
  • Figure 7 shows schematically a sectional view of a flow chamber during the filling with matrix carrying beads as described in step three.
  • the flow chamber comprises a ring shaped wall 36 adjacent to a plane optical wall 37.
  • the position of the ring shaped wall 36 relative to the optical wall 37 leaves a gap between an edge 38 of the ring shaped wall and the optical WEIII which gap is just small enough to keep the matrix beads 40 or droplets trapped in the chamber whereas the liquid may pass through the gap to be led away to a waste container when a liquid with suspended beads or droplets are discharged into the chamber.
  • the escaping liquid is symbolized by the arrows 39.
  • Figure 8 shows the chamber according to figure 7 seen through the optical wall 37.
  • Figure 9 shows schematically a flow chamber as the one shown in figure 7 and 8 only during the emptying of the chamber as described in the sixth step of the process.
  • the liquid is sucked up through the flow chamber as symbolized by the arrows 41 and 42.
  • Figure 10 shows the chamber of figure 9 seen through the wall 37.
  • the components of the apparatus may be modified widely.
  • the ring shaped wall 36 is movable in relation to the optical wall 37. This allows unidirectional flow of liquid through the chamber.
  • the edge 38 is maintained so close to the optical wall 37 that the matrix beads or droplets are trapped and only the liquid may escape through the gap.
  • the wall 36 and its edge 38 is moved away from the optical wall 37 so far that the width of the gap is larger than the diameter of the beads. Thereby the beads may be flushed out through the gap to a waste container. In this way a more effective and quicker flushing of the chamber may be obtained.
  • the changing of the distance between the edge 38 and the optical wall 37 may be controlled by the computer controlling the course and sequence of the steps.

Abstract

A rapid automated method for identifying biologically active substances by their effect on living cells comprises the steps: a) culturing cells on/within a matrix that fluidically can be controlled; b) loading the cells with luminescent chemical molecules or having them previously transfected with recombinant molecules having luminescent properties; c) injecting a well defined volume of the cell carrying matrix suspension into a flow fluid which transports the suspension into a flow chamber having a wall through which the content of said flow chamber may be monitored; d) perifusing the cells with a sample containing a potentially biologically active substance; e) measuring the luminescence response of the content in the flow chamber; f) flushing the flow chamber to make it ready for a new testing cycle.

Description

METHOD FOR IDENTIFYING BIOLOGICALLY ACTIVE SUBSTANCES BY THEIR EFFECT ON LIVING CELLS
The invention relates to the technique of identifying biologically active substances and to be more specific to identification by the effect of the substance on living cells. These biologically active compounds include, but are not limited to, drugs, insecticides, pesticides, and herbicides.
The practice of screening large libraries of samples of unknown composition for the few which may contain a compound of specific biological activity is one of the more common methods of new drug discovery. The samples of unknown composition are in most cases biological material, such as plant extracts or microbial fermentation broths. Screening these for biological activity is normally accomplished by performing binding assays or, more recently, functional assays.
Binding Assays. A binding assay is an attempt to find compounds of interest by identifying those which adhere with a minimum degree of affinity to cells or cell products. This can be done using fluorescent, luminescent, or radioactive detection methods. These assays are based not on a biological response, but a passive process which results from biological activity, namely the generation of specific molecules by biological systems. They cannot be construed as functional assays or as real-time assays.
Gene Expression Assays. Another way to determine biological activity is to measure up-regulation or down-regulation of expression of a known gene. This is done by inserting DNA which codes for something which can be readily measured into a cell's genome such that the expression of interest is coupled to expression of the inserted DNA. While this is a true functional assay, it also is not a real time assay. In addition, it is only capable of finding compounds which affect gene expression. In many cases this is not the response of interest. Other Functional Assays. The CytoSensor described in US 4 915 812 and US 5 395 503 is a commercial instrument which has been billed as a screening instrument. It is based on the detection of increased cellular proton flux by means of a semiconducting electrode. The instrument is applicable to high through-put screening, but can only detect cellular events that result in changes in extracellular pH. Again, many responses of interest are not associated with changes in extracellular pH.
The growth over the last few decades in the knowledge of cellular signalling has presented extremely rich opportunities for new ways of screening for biologically active compounds. Armed with knowledge of the biological process which one wants to affect with a new product, it is conceivable to monitor the actual process as a way of looking for compounds which affect it. The development of fluorescent probe molecules which upon interaction with intracellular signalling molecules (e.g. ions, enzymes, cyclic nucleotides) change their spectral properties has enabled the real- time monitoring of dynamic biological responses within living cells. Most of these probes can be introduced non-invasively into cells and will, depending on the detection system, allow characterization of cellular events in high temporal resolution (microseconds to seconds) and high spatial resolution (nanometres to micrometres). This probe technology, in combination with the technology of cellular imaging which is described below, has had a major impact on cell biology in that it has enabled monitoring of complex, cross-reacting intracellular events that could not be unravelled by conventional invasive biochemical techniques.
Imaging of cellular functions using luminescent probes. Visualization of intracellular function using luminescent (fluorescent or bioluminescent) probes has become one of the mainstay techniques in modern cell biology. Using traditional optical microscopes with quantitative detectors in place of the human eye, both the concentration and distribution in the cell of a variety of intracellular molecules of interest can be measured. While luminescent probes can be measured in large populations of cells using other techniques, imaging is the only way to learn what is going on in single cells or small populations of cells. It also has the advantage of much higher optical efficiency when compared with traditional spectrophotomethc techniques for measuring optical signals.
To obtain high spatial resolution it is necessary to image the cells of interest through a research grade microscope. This technique is very labour-intensive and time- consuming. Therefore, it does not lend itself to high sample volume measurements such as are necessary in high through-put screening for novel biologically active substances (e.g. drugs, insecticides, pesticides, herbicides). In these studies it is necessary to screen thousands of samples containing complex mixtures of compounds within a very short time frame. It is important that the biological activity of the samples are well characterized because if biological activity is found in a given sample, a cumbersome compound isolation and structure elucidation follows.
It is the object of the invention to provide a method by which the few biologically active samples in a large library of samples may be identified in rapid succession by monitoring the effect of each sample on living cells. These cells are ones which have been specifically chosen to exhibit the desired biological behaviour. They may be primary cells cultured from fresh tissue, or they may be genetically engineered cells transfected with one or more genes of interest.
This is obtained by a method which comprises the steps of a) culturing cells on/within a matrix that can be fluidically controlled,
b) loading the cells with luminescent chemical molecules,
c) injecting a well defined volume of the cell carrying matrix suspension into a flow fluid which transports the suspension into a flow chamber having a wall through which the content of said flow chamber may be monitored.
d) exposing the cells to a sample containing the potentially biologically active substance,
e) measuring the luminescence response of the content in the flow chamber,
f) flushing the flow chamber to make it ready for a new test cycle.
The method according to the invention allows monitoring of dynamic cellular responses in living cells, while the cells are attached to a matrix (e.g. microcarrier beads) that can be fluidically controlled. Under continuous flow operation it is possible to obtain very short sample exposure times which make the invention suited to high through-put screening for novel biologically active substances. The method will also find application in the search for rare biological events associated with expression of specific proteins in transfected cell lines.
According to the invention the matrix may be provided as microcarrier beads or as microdroplets of agarose.
The method employs detection of cellular signals from cells cultured on the surface of microcarrier beads or encapsulated in microdroplets of agarose gel, the beads/droplets not only providing the support for the cells but also the vehicle for transportation of said cells from tissue culture facilities (incubators) to detection system. The flow chamber is capable of positioning the carriers in a fixed position without the aid of a human operator, and simultaneously allowing visualization through a microscope equipped with a high numerical aperture objective lens.
According to the invention the flushing of the flow chamber may advantageously be a forward flushing. By a forward flushing is meant that the flush liquid passes the chamber in the same direction as do the injected matrix carrying flow fluid. Hereby a more effective flushing is obtained as the flushing fluid simply displaces the matrix out of the chamber instead of sucking it out.
A further object of the invention is to provide an apparatus for use by the method according to the invention.
Such an apparatus is characterized in that it comprises a flow chamber having a wall through which the content of said chamber may be monitored, a fluidic handling system for controlled sequential injection of buffer, cell carrying matrix and sample or samples into the flow chamber and for final removing of waste during a flushing of this chamber.
The flow chamber of the apparatus may comprise a plane optical surface as a wall through which the content of the chamber may be monitored, a ring shaped wall having an edge adjacent to the plane optical surface leaving a gap between said edge and said optical surface which gap allows liquid but not the matrix to pass. When a volume of buffer carrying the matrix beads or droplets is injected into the flow chamber the beads or droplets will be retained on the optical surface whereas the buffer may escape through the gap between this surface and the edge of the ring shaped wall. Injected sample will trickle between the beads or the droplets in close contact with these beads and droplets and escape through the gap. The chamber may be flushed by sucking flushing buffer in through the gap and removing it via the inlet of the chamber until all beads and droplets are flushed away. A quicker flushing may be obtained when the distance between the edge of the ring shaped wall and the plane optical surface may be controlled so that it momentarily allows the matrix beads or microdroplets to pass. This way the flow through the chamber may be made unidirectional and all supplies may be made to the inlet of the chamber and all draining of waste may take place from an area surrounding the inlet. This offers two advantages. First, it increases the rate at which samples may be processed by eliminating a wash step after the beads or droplets are removed. Second, it eliminates any contamination of the chamber by anything which may remain in the waste, which would ordinarily be sucked in during the flush step and have to be washed out.
Further, the width of the gap may be changed by electromagnetic means which are controlled to momentarily pull the ring shaped wall and the plane surface away from each other. This makes it easy to control the width of the gap so that it is enlarged during the flushing step of the identification cycle.
In the following the invention will be further described with references to the drawings, wherein
Figure 1-6 show schematically a diagram of the fluidic system of an apparatus in six successive step positions during the sequence run through when carrying out the method according to the invention,
Figure 7 shows schematically a sectional view of the flow chamber during the fixation of the matrix at an optical surface of an end wall of the chamber,
Figure 8 shows the chamber according to figure 7 seen through the end wall of the chamber, Figure 9 shows schematically a sectional view of the flow chamber during flushing, and
Figure 10 shows the chamber according to figure 9 seen through the end wall of the chamber.
An apparatus for carrying out the identification cycle comprises as shown in figure 1 -6 a flow chamber 1 into which a charge of matrix beads carrying the living cells chosen for the identification is transported and exposed to the sample the influence of which shall be identified. The content of the flow chamber may be observed through a wall 2 of this chamber.
The optical portion used for the observation is illustrated by the arrow 3. This optical portion may be a standard microscope equipped for epi-illumination. The light source may be a rapid scanning monochromator which allows switching among selected wavelengths of light for excitation of the fluorescent molecules in the cells in a time scale appropriate for the response being measured. The fluorescence detector may be a photomultiplier, camera, image detector or other with sufficiently fast response to allow the signal to be detected without undersampling of the process. Both the light source and the detector are computer controlled for synchronizing the acquisition of the fluorescence signals with the appropriate excitation wavelength.
The fluidic part of the apparatus further comprises a container 4 for a buffer fluid, waste containers 5 and 6 and a container 7 for matrix beads or droplets carrying the living cells.
Further the fluidic part of the apparatus comprises three syringes 8, 9, and 10 which under computer control are sequentially operated to act as pumps providing the driving force which sends liquid through the apparatus in a way which is further controlled by two-way valves 11 , 12, and 13 at the outlet ends of the respective syringes and a multi-way selection valve 14. All valves are controlled by the computer to establish the appropriate connection during the different steps of the process.
The selection valve has a main lead 15 which by the different positions of this valve may be connected to one of a number of other leads 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20. The choice of connection is controlled by the computer.
Figure 1 shows the first step during which the syringe 8 is loaded with buffer from the container 4 whereas the syringe 9 is empty, i.e. with its piston in its innermost position. The selection valve 14 in its position connecting the main lead 15 to the lead 17 which is connected to the container 7 containing the matrix beads carrying the living cells.
By the second step illustrated in figure 2 the piston of the syringe 9 is drawn outwards, as illustrated by the arrow 22 in figure 2, and the valve at the outlet of this syringe 9 is in a position connecting this syringe to the main lead 15 of the selection valve 14. Thereby the suction provided by the syringe 9 will cause a suction of matrix beads from the container 7 through the selection valve 14 and into the main lead 15, as illustrated by the arrow 24. A tube coil 21 between the valve 12 and the main lead 15 acts as a reservoir which can absorb a sufficient amount of liquid to avoid that beads are sucked into the syringe 9 or the valve 12.
By the third step the piston of the syringe 8 is pressed inward, as illustrated by the arrow 23 in figure 3, and the valve 11 at the outlet of this syringe 8 is changed to the position connecting this syringe 8 to the main lead 15 of the selection valve 14 which valve itself connects its main lead 15 to the lead 19 leading to the flow chamber 1. When the piston is pressed into the syringe 8 its content of buffer liquid is pressed into the coil 21 where it displaces the liquid with suspended matrix beads. This matrix bead carrying liquid is led through the lead 19 to the flow chamber 1 as illustrated by the arrows 25 and 26. In the flow chamber 1 the matrix beads are trapped as it will be described below and the buffer liquid carrying the beads flows past and into the waste container 5. At the end of this step the syringe 8 is refilled with buffer from the container 4 before proceeding to the fourth step.
During the fourth step as shown in figure 4 the piston of the syringe 8 is drawn out and the selection valve provides a connection to the lead 16 which is inserted into a sample 27 which shall be tested. Therefore, when the piston of the syringe 9 is drawn outward, the sample is sucked into the coil 21 as illustrated by the arrows 29 and 30, and by the fifth step shown in figure 5 the sample is propelled to the flow chamber 1 by pressing in the piston of syringe 8 as shown by an arrow 31. During this step the selection valve connects the main lead 15 with the lead 19 leading to the flow chamber 1. The sample washes over the matrix beads trapped in the flow chamber 1 and during this fifth step the signal from the cells on the matrix trapped in the flow chamber 1 is monitored through the wall 2 of the flow chamber 1 by a detector connected to a fluorescence microscope illustrated by a large arrow 32. At the end of the fifth step the syringe 8 is again filled with buffer liquid from the container 4.
Figure 6 illustrates the sixth and last step of the process during which step the selection valve is moved to make connection to the lead 20 which may be connected to a waste container not shown. The piston of syringe 10 is moved rapidly outward, aspirating liquid from the waste container 5 through the flow chamber in the reverse direction and into the syringe 10 as illustrated by the arrows 33 and 34. During this aspiration the valve 13 is in the opposite position of the position shown in figure 6. At the end of the aspiration stroke the valve 13 is turned to the position shown in figure 6 and the piston of the syringe 10 is moved inward to dispense the content of the syringe 10 into the waste container 6 as shown by the arrow 35. Additionally the syringe 9 is emptied through the selector valve 14 into the not shown waste container connected to the lead 20.
Hereafter the system is ready for the next cycle.
During the next cycle the row of samples is conveyed one step forward so that not the sample 27 but the sample 28 is conducted into the flow chamber and so on until a sufficient number of cycles have been performed to test all the samples in the row. As it is seen the whole detecting process may be carried out automatically.
The described embodiment has been shown only for the purpose of illustration and the steps and the number and kind of valves and syringes may be varied and modified widely without deviating from the scope of the invention. Also, the construction of the flow chamber may be varied from that which is described below.
Figure 7 shows schematically a sectional view of a flow chamber during the filling with matrix carrying beads as described in step three. The flow chamber comprises a ring shaped wall 36 adjacent to a plane optical wall 37. The position of the ring shaped wall 36 relative to the optical wall 37 leaves a gap between an edge 38 of the ring shaped wall and the optical WEIII which gap is just small enough to keep the matrix beads 40 or droplets trapped in the chamber whereas the liquid may pass through the gap to be led away to a waste container when a liquid with suspended beads or droplets are discharged into the chamber. The escaping liquid is symbolized by the arrows 39. Figure 8 shows the chamber according to figure 7 seen through the optical wall 37. Figure 9 shows schematically a flow chamber as the one shown in figure 7 and 8 only during the emptying of the chamber as described in the sixth step of the process. Here the liquid is sucked up through the flow chamber as symbolized by the arrows 41 and 42. Figure 10 shows the chamber of figure 9 seen through the wall 37.
As mentioned the components of the apparatus may be modified widely. In an embodiment the ring shaped wall 36 is movable in relation to the optical wall 37. This allows unidirectional flow of liquid through the chamber. During the step by which the flow chamber is filled with the matrix beads or droplets the edge 38 is maintained so close to the optical wall 37 that the matrix beads or droplets are trapped and only the liquid may escape through the gap. When the matrix beads or droplets are to be discharged from the chamber, the wall 36 and its edge 38 is moved away from the optical wall 37 so far that the width of the gap is larger than the diameter of the beads. Thereby the beads may be flushed out through the gap to a waste container. In this way a more effective and quicker flushing of the chamber may be obtained. The changing of the distance between the edge 38 and the optical wall 37 may be controlled by the computer controlling the course and sequence of the steps.

Claims

Claims
1. A rapid, automated method for identifying biologically active substances by their effect on living cells, the method comprising the steps
a) culturing cells on/within a matrix that fluidically can be controlled,
b) loading the cells with luminescent chemical molecules or having them previously transfected with recombinant molecules having luminescent properties,
c) Injecting a well defined volume of the cell carrying matrix suspension into a flow fluid which transports the suspension into a flow chamber having a wall through which the content of said flow chamber may be monitored.
d) perifusing the cells with a sample containing a potentially biologically active substance,
e) measuring the luminescence response of the content in the flow chamber.
f) flushing the flow chamber to make it ready for a new testing cycle.
2. A method according to claim 1 , characterized in that the matrix is microcarrier beads.
3. A method according to claim 1 , characterized in that the matrix is microdroplets of agarose.
4. A method according to claim 1 , characterized in that the flushing of the flow chamber is a forward flushing.
5. Apparatus for use by the method according to any one of the claims 1 - 4, characterized in that it comprises a flow chamber having a wall through which the content of the cell may be monitored, a fluidic handling system for controlled sequential injection of buffer, cell carrying matrix and sample into a flow chamber and final removing of waste during a flushing of this chamber.
6. Apparatus according to claim 5, characterized in that the flow chamber comprises a plane optical surface of the wall through which the content of the chamber may be monitored, a ring shaped wall having an edge adjacent to the plane optical surface leaving a gap between said edge and said optical surface which gap allow liquid but not the matrix to pass.
7. Apparatus according to claim 6, characterized in that the distance between the edge of the ring shaped wall and the plane optical surface may be controlled so that it momentarily allows the matrix to pass.
8. Apparatus according to claim 7, characterized in that the width of the gap is changed by electromagnetic means which are controlled to momentarily pull the ring shaped wall and the plane surface away from each other.
PCT/DK1996/000133 1995-03-31 1996-03-29 Method for identifying biologically active substances by their effect on living cells WO1996030760A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

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AU51430/96A AU5143096A (en) 1995-03-31 1996-03-29 Method for identifying biologically active substances by the ir effect on living cells
EP96908028A EP0817965A1 (en) 1995-03-31 1996-03-29 Method for identifying biologically active substances by their effect on living cells
JP8528816A JPH11504507A (en) 1995-03-31 1996-03-29 Methods for identifying biologically active substrates by these effects on living cells

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DK35595 1995-03-31
DK0355/95 1995-03-31

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Cited By (15)

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US6280967B1 (en) 1996-08-02 2001-08-28 Axiom Biotechnologies, Inc. Cell flow apparatus and method for real-time of cellular responses
WO1998005959A1 (en) * 1996-08-02 1998-02-12 Axiom Biotechnologies, Inc. Apparatus and method for real-time measurement of cellular response
US6958221B2 (en) 1996-08-02 2005-10-25 Caliper Life Sciences, Inc. Cell flow apparatus and method for real-time measurements of patient cellular responses
US5919646A (en) * 1996-08-02 1999-07-06 Axiom Biotechnologies, Inc. Apparatus and method for real-time measurement of cellular response
US6558916B2 (en) 1996-08-02 2003-05-06 Axiom Biotechnologies, Inc. Cell flow apparatus and method for real-time measurements of patient cellular responses
US6242209B1 (en) 1996-08-02 2001-06-05 Axiom Biotechnologies, Inc. Cell flow apparatus and method for real-time measurements of cellular responses
US5804436A (en) * 1996-08-02 1998-09-08 Axiom Biotechnologies, Inc. Apparatus and method for real-time measurement of cellular response
US6110661A (en) * 1997-05-01 2000-08-29 Eastman Chemical Company Bioluminescent reporter bacterium
WO1998049337A1 (en) * 1997-05-01 1998-11-05 Eastman Chemical Company Bioluminescent reporter bacterium and methods for toxicity monitoring in biological wastewater treatment systems
US6632619B1 (en) 1997-05-16 2003-10-14 The Governors Of The University Of Alberta Microfluidic system and methods of use
US6900021B1 (en) 1997-05-16 2005-05-31 The University Of Alberta Microfluidic system and methods of use
WO2001096597A2 (en) * 2000-06-13 2001-12-20 Glaxo Group Limited High throughput screening of compounds for biological activity
WO2001096597A3 (en) * 2000-06-13 2003-09-12 Glaxo Group Ltd High throughput screening of compounds for biological activity
EP1248107A2 (en) * 2001-03-22 2002-10-09 IPF Pharmaceuticals GmbH Method and device for time-resolved screening
EP1248107A3 (en) * 2001-03-22 2002-10-16 IPF Pharmaceuticals GmbH Method and device for time-resolved screening

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JPH11504507A (en) 1999-04-27
EP0817965A1 (en) 1998-01-14

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