GRID ETCHER
An apparatus and process for monitoring migratory cell proliferation with restricted migration on a substrate includes providing a substrate, coating the substrate with extracellular matrix, plating cells suspended in cell culture media on extracellular matrix, and placing intersecting channels across the extracellular matrix components by removing the extracellular matrix components from the channels to isolate islands of the extracellular matrix components on the substrate. When the cells are immersed with a fluid, migration of the cells is confined to the isolated islands of the extracellular matrix components, permitting long-term observation of a migratory population.
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This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/967,703, filed on Oct. 14, 2004, and issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,276,367 on Oct. 2, 2007.
STATEMENT AS TO RIGHTS TO INVENTIONS MADE UNDER FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENTThe technology set forth herein is federally sponsored and funded by the United States Department of Health and Human Services. The United States government has certain rights in this invention.
REFERENCE TO A “SEQUENCE LISTING,” A TABLE, OR A COMPUTER PROGRAM LISTING APPENDIX SUBMITTED ON A COMPACT DISKNot applicable.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates to monitoring the proliferation of migratory cells such as CNS stem cells/embryonic stem cells or any other migratory cells. More specifically, an apparatus and process is disclosed for placing isolated islands of an extracellular matrix on a glass cover slip, and, plating, growing, and monitoring the proliferation of migratory cells on the isolated islands of the extracellular matrix.
Migratory cells, such as CNS stem cells/embryonic stem cells or any other migratory cells are grown and simultaneously monitored during proliferation for research purposes. Typically, an extracellular matrix is placed upon a substrate, usually a coverslip. Thereafter, cells are plated to (placed on) the extracellular matrix for observation during proliferation. During this observed proliferation, the cells unfortunately also migrate.
Migration causes problems. Typically, only a discrete area on a substrate, such as a portion of a substrate having the extracellular matrix, can be observed. During migration, cells within the observed discrete area move out of the observed discrete area; what becomes of such cells is never known to the observer. Other foreign cells, initially outside of the observed discrete area, move into the observed area; as a consequence, the beginning history of such cells can never be known to the observer. In either case, the integrity of the monitoring processes is degraded. Where one wishes to have an observed history of the proliferation of a group of monitored cells, migration of the cells into or out of the observed area must be inhibited.
For this reason, where cell populations are grown on substrates, such as glass cover slips, attempts have been made to provide isolated islands of substrate. These isolated islands of substrate have the effect of allowing cell migration within their boundaries while maintaining a discrete cell population within an observable area.
Attempts to create isolated islands has included printing glass cover slips with the desired isolated islands. In this technique, the material from which the extracellular matrix is ultimately formulated is placed upon a printing block having printing areas shaped with the desired profile of isolated islands of extracellular matrix. Thereafter, the printing block is impressed upon a substrate, such as a glass cover slip, to transfer the extracellular matrix material from the print block to the glass cover slip. Substrate material is transferred from the printing block onto the glass cover slip much as printer's ink is transferred from a printing block onto paper which is to be printed. The extracellular matrix transferred to the substrate has the profile of the printing areas on the printing block.
Other techniques have included photo lithographic masks utilizing photo resist, contact masks, micro stamping, and ink jet printing.
For many of these techniques to work, drying of the substrate transferred on the glass cover slip from the printing block is required. Unfortunately, drying substantially degrades or destroys the extracellular matrix. The growth of cells for subsequent observation is difficult. Further, many of these techniques leave residual chemicals (such as photo resist) with the deposited substrate. These residual chemicals degrade the subsequent growth on the substrate. Most importantly, these techniques do not permit plating of the migratory cells before formation of the islands of substrate.
It has also been contemplated to utilize lasers to form continuous channels upon a continuous layer of extracellular matrix on a glass cover slip. In this technique, the extracellular matrix is placed upon a substrate, typically a glass cover slip. Once the extracellular material is placed, at least one laser is utilized to etch channels in the extracellular matrix. Typically, the extracellular matrix is submerged during laser etching of channels. This provides isolated islands of extracellular matrix having separation between isolated islands complimentary to the channel width and placement on the substrate.
The technique suffers from several disadvantages.
Utilizing lasers to make such channels is expensive. Further, the ablation of the extracellular matrix generates debris and produces localized heating at the channel boundaries which can damage the extracellular matrix adjacent the channel boundaries. Further, if cutting of the channels occurs while the matrix is submerged in a liquid, localized heating of the substrate will occur.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAn apparatus and process for monitoring migratory cell proliferation with reduced migration on a substrate includes providing a substrate, such as a glass coverslip. The substrate is coated with extracellular matrix. Plating the extracellular matrix with migratory cells then occurs. Finally, intersecting channels are placed across the plated extracellular matrix by mechanical etching to form desired isolated islands for the observation of migratory cell growth. When the plated cells within the isolated islands are immersed with a growth media, migration of the cells is confined to the isolated islands of the substrate. By observing the isolated islands during cell growth, cell characteristics of migratory cells can be observed.
In the following specification, we use the word “substrate” to describe the surface on which the extracellular matrix is placed. The reader will understand that this is almost always a coverslip used for magnified observation of the migratory cell proliferation.
Further, we do not emphasize the normal step of conjugating a fluorescent dye to the extracellular matrix in order to render the extracellular matrix visible and provide the necessary light for observing cell proliferation. As this step is conventional in observations of cellular proliferation, it will not be further discussed herein.
An advantage of this invention is that the formation of the isolated islands of extracellular matrix upon a glass cover slip is carried out in a continually moist environment. A continually moist environment can be assured by immersing the cover slip during the mechanical etching of the channels.
In the preferred embodiment, cell plating to the extracellular matrix occurs before the channels are mechanically etched. There is a reason for this order.
If the mechanical etching is done first, and the plating is done second, some cells that settle within the plating area will attach to the mechanically etched channels where the extracellular material has been removed. The cells within the channel areas, lacking the extracellular matrix, will become detached and float in the liquid. At least some of these cells floating within the liquid will eventually land on surfaces of the substrate that have the extracellular matrix. After such landing, they will attach to the regular growth surface and become normal migratory cells, indistinguishable from the cell group under observation. This will introduce new cells into the controlled growth areas which will degrade the controlled observation process of cell proliferation.
By plating the cells on the extracellular matrix, and then removing the plated cells with the extracellular matrix within the channel areas, the phenomena of detached cells floating in the liquid is minimized.
A specialized apparatus is disclosed for mechanically etching regularly spaced intersecting channels onto the extracellular matrix on the substrate. Specifically, an open chamber is defined on the cover slip overlying the extracellular matrix. This open chamber has a fluid tight boundary about the periphery of the chamber to maintain liquid media within the chamber. An etching tool has an etching end with regularly spaced flat mechanical etching teeth separated by regularly spaced intervals for etching the extracellular matrix. The chamber is supplied with a rectilinear opening having boundaries for guiding the etching end of the etching apparatus in movement across the substrate. The etching apparatus has a width to fit snugly within the dimension of the rectilinear opening.
In use, the chamber is placed over the extracellular matrix on the substrate and filled with cell culture media. At least one etching tool with its regularly spaced flat mechanical etching teeth is fitted to the rectilinear opening and extends through the liquid to the substrate. The etching tool is guided by the rectilinear opening and mechanically etches the extracellular matrix while undergoing guided etching excursion across the rectilinear opening. By first having a mechanical etching tool undergo guided etching excursion parallel to first opposite sides of the rectilinear opening and then having a mechanical etching tool undergo excursion parallel to second opposite sides of the rectilinear opening, a regular matrix of channels is defined upon the extracellular matrix. This leaves a pattern of uniformly sized and aligned rectilinear islands upon the extracellular matrix for the isolation of migratory cell growth.
In the normal case, the rectilinear opening is square and a single mechanical etching tool is utilized. It will be understood that two etching tools having varying widths and teeth of varying dimension and spacing can be used to generate rectangular growth areas of varied dimensions.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Referring to the exploded view of
The extracellular matrix 11 is a growth surface. In order to effectively capture cells and thereafter permit the optimum propagation of the captured cells, this surface should preferably remain moist at all times. Because of this requirement, it will be seen that the chamber for etching the desired isolated islands is designed to have the O-ring boundary maintaining the surface of cover slip C in a fluid environment. Immediately overlying cover slip C, circular O-ring O provides a reservoir barrier immediately underlying grid making guide G.
Grid making guide G fastens at apertures 20 to screws 14 protruding upwardly of holding plate H. Grid making guide G includes central bulbous portion having rectilinear aperture A, here shown as a square, configured centrally of the guide. As will hereinafter become apparent, cover slip C is placed on the holding plate H with O-ring O overlying upwardly exposed surface 10 and extracellular matrix 11. Typically, holding plate H, cover slip C, O-ring O, and grid making guide G are all held together by wing nuts 16 on screws 14 to provide a gentle but firm compression on cover slip C toward holding plate H.
Etching tool E includes first etching end 30 and second etching end 31. Each of these etching ends includes seven regularly thick etching tines 32 spaced by regular intervals 33. Further, etching tool E has an overall width which matches the overall width of square aperture A within grid making guide G. It will be seen that the tines 32 and intervals 33 vary at each end of etching tool E.
In operation, cover slip C is covered with the extracellular matrix and thereafter plated over the surface of the extracellular matrix with the cells to be analyzed during proliferation. Once this is done, holding plate H, cover slip C, O-ring O, and grid making guide G are all assembled, and a liquid is poured into the chamber defined between cover slip C and grid making guide G by O-ring O. Thereafter, mechanical etching occurs utilizing an end 30, 31 of etching tool E. This etching occurs by aligning etching tool E parallel to one of the sides of aperture A and moving the tool normal to its parallel alignment. This movement places a group of channels L (see
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During proliferation, the areas in which the cells grow are monitored continuously. Where cells leave the monitored areas, there is no way of identifying what happens to the cells. Where the cells arrive into the monitored areas, there is no way of identifying what is the prior history of the cells and where they have come from.
Where the islands I set forth in this disclosure are utilized, cells are for the most part confined to the boundaries of the islands. Presuming that the entirety of the islands are continuously monitored, departing and arriving cells are essentially eliminated enabling a much more comprehensive record of proliferation to be maintained.
The results of this latter assurance can be seen in the graphical representation of
Observing
Claims
1. A device for making channels in extracellular matrix on a substrate comprising:
- a plate to support a substrate coated with extracellular matrix;
- a frame placed over said substrate and said plate having an aperture which allows working access to at least a portion of said extracellular matrix; and,
- an etching tool having multiple tines which, when said tines traverse across said extracellular matrix in the region defined by said aperture, creates channels within said extracellular matrix.
2. The device of claim 1 wherein said tines are evenly spaced in said etching tool and each have a rectangular cross-section.
3. The device of claim 1 wherein said aperture has a rectangular shape.
4. The device of claim 1 wherein said frame makes a watertight seal with said substrate which allows said extracellular matrix to be maintained in a liquid media.
5. The device of claim 1 wherein said etching tool has two sets of tines which can be used for removing extracellular matrix.
6. An etching assembly comprising:
- a plate capable of supporting a substrate;
- a frame having an aperture which is capable of attaching over a substrate to said plate; and,
- an etching tool having multiple tines wherein said tines can penetrate through said frame aperture to be capable of etching material away from an underlying substrate.
7. The etching assembly of claim 6 wherein said etching tool tines are evenly spaced and each have a rectangular cross section.
8. The etching assembly of claim 6 wherein said aperture has a rectangular shape and said frame is attached to said plate with screws.
9. The etching assembly of claim 6 further comprising a substrate coated with extracellular matrix.
10. The etching assembly of claim 6 wherein a watertight seal is formed in said frame aperture when said frame is affixed over a substrate to said plate.
11. A process for making channels in extracellular matrix on a substrate comprising the steps of:
- providing a planar substrate;
- coating said substrate with extracellular matrix;
- selecting an etching device comprising a frame with an aperture and an etching tool with multiple tines;
- projecting the tines of said etching tool through said frame aperture and using said tines to remove channels of extracellular matrix on said substrate within the region defined by said frame aperture.
12. The process of claim 11 wherein said tines are evenly spaced and have a rectangular cross-section.
13. The process of claim 11 wherein channels of extracellular matrix are removed in an intersecting pattern to create islands of extracellular matrix.
14. A process for making channels in extracellular matrix with cells on a substrate comprising the steps of:
- providing a planar substrate;
- coating said substrate with extracellular matrix;
- plating migratory cells onto the extracellular matrix to create a matrix with cells;
- allowing the cells to adhere to the extracellular matrix;
- selecting an etching device comprising a frame with an aperture and an etching tool with multiple tines;
- projecting the tines of said etching tool through said frame aperture and using said tines to remove channels of extracellular matrix on said substrate within the region defined by said frame aperture.
15. The process of claim 14 wherein said tines are evenly spaced and have a rectangular cross-section.
16. The process of claim 14 wherein channels of extracellular matrix are removed in an intersecting pattern to create islands of extracellular matrix.
Type: Application
Filed: Sep 28, 2007
Publication Date: Mar 20, 2008
Applicant: The Government of the U.S.A., as represented by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (Rockville, MD)
Inventors: Rea Ravin (Rockville, MD), James Sullivan (Bowie, MD), Daniel Hoeppner (Bethesda, MD), David Munno (Stamford, CT), Ron McKay (Bethesda, MD)
Application Number: 11/864,765
International Classification: B05D 3/12 (20060101); B23D 1/08 (20060101);