US20020045270A1 - Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for manufacturing and use - Google Patents

Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for manufacturing and use Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20020045270A1
US20020045270A1 US09/943,076 US94307601A US2002045270A1 US 20020045270 A1 US20020045270 A1 US 20020045270A1 US 94307601 A US94307601 A US 94307601A US 2002045270 A1 US2002045270 A1 US 2002045270A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
support plate
sample support
areas
affinity
sample
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US09/943,076
Inventor
Martin Schurenberg
Jochen Franzen
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Bruker Daltonics GmbH and Co KG
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Assigned to BRUKER DALTONIK GMBH reassignment BRUKER DALTONIK GMBH ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: FRANZEN, JOCHEN, SCHURENBERG, MARTIN
Publication of US20020045270A1 publication Critical patent/US20020045270A1/en
Priority to US10/828,153 priority Critical patent/US7399640B2/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J49/00Particle spectrometers or separator tubes
    • H01J49/02Details
    • H01J49/04Arrangements for introducing or extracting samples to be analysed, e.g. vacuum locks; Arrangements for external adjustment of electron- or ion-optical components
    • H01J49/0409Sample holders or containers
    • H01J49/0418Sample holders or containers for laser desorption, e.g. matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation [MALDI] plates or surface enhanced laser desorption/ionisation [SELDI] plates
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01LCHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL LABORATORY APPARATUS FOR GENERAL USE
    • B01L3/00Containers or dishes for laboratory use, e.g. laboratory glassware; Droppers
    • B01L3/50Containers for the purpose of retaining a material to be analysed, e.g. test tubes
    • B01L3/508Containers for the purpose of retaining a material to be analysed, e.g. test tubes rigid containers not provided for above
    • B01L3/5085Containers for the purpose of retaining a material to be analysed, e.g. test tubes rigid containers not provided for above for multiple samples, e.g. microtitration plates
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N1/00Sampling; Preparing specimens for investigation
    • G01N1/28Preparing specimens for investigation including physical details of (bio-)chemical methods covered elsewhere, e.g. G01N33/50, C12Q
    • G01N1/40Concentrating samples
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T436/00Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing
    • Y10T436/11Automated chemical analysis
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T436/00Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing
    • Y10T436/24Nuclear magnetic resonance, electron spin resonance or other spin effects or mass spectrometry
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T436/00Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing
    • Y10T436/25Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing including sample preparation
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T436/00Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing
    • Y10T436/25Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing including sample preparation
    • Y10T436/2575Volumetric liquid transfer

Definitions

  • Mass spectrometry involving ionization by matrix-assisted laser desorption (MALDI) has established itself as a standard procedure for the analysis of biosubstances with large molecules.
  • time-of-flight mass spectrometers TOF-MS
  • FT-ICR Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance spectrometers
  • ion traps radio frequency quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometers
  • analyte molecules are present either in very diluted form in aqueous solutions, pure or mixed with organic solvents.
  • these analytical solutions are very complex and dirty with respect to the requirements of the analytical procedures, e.g., in the case of body fluids.
  • Biopolymers comprise oligonucleotides (i.e. fragments of genetic material in various forms such as DNA or RNA), polysaccharides and proteins (the essential building blocks of the living world) as well as their special analogues and conjugates such as glycoproteins or lipoproteins, and peptides arising from the action of digestive enzymes.
  • matrix substance for MALDI depends on the type of analyte molecule; more than a hundred different matrix substances are now known.
  • One of the tasks of the matrix substances is to isolate the analyte molecules from each other wherever possible and bind them to the sample support, to transfer the molecules into the vapor phase by forming a vapor cloud during the laser bombardment, and ultimately to ionize the biomolecules by protonation or deprotonation.
  • it seems important to separate the analyte molecules from each other i.e., no clusters of analyte molecules should be allowed in the prepared matrix crystal sample.
  • a variety of procedures are known for applying analytes and matrices.
  • the simplest of these entails the pipetting of a solution containing analyte and matrix onto a cleaned, metallic sample support.
  • the drop of solution wets a certain area of the metal surface (or its oxide layer) whose size on hydrophilic surfaces is many times larger than that of the diameter of a drop.
  • the size depends on the hydrophilicity and the microstructuring of the metal surface as well as on the properties of the droplet, in particular that of the solvent.
  • a sample spot consisting of small matrix crystals forms that is the same size as that of the originally wetted surface area.
  • the matrix crystals are usually not uniformly distributed throughout the formerly wetted area.
  • crystals of the matrix start growing at the inner margin of the wetting surface on the metal plate. They then grow towards the interior of the wetting surface. They often form thin needle crystals, as is the case for example for the frequently used matrices 5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) or 3-hydroxypicolinic acid (HPA), which often stand out from the carrier plate at the interior of the spot.
  • the center of the spot is frequently empty or covered with fine crystals, although often they cannot be used for MALDI ionization because of their high concentration of alkaline salts.
  • the loading of the crystals with biomolecules is also very uneven.
  • the aqueous drops are fixed by the hydrophilic anchors and prevented from wandering even when they initially rest on surrounding lyophobic areas due to their weight.
  • the droplets withdraw onto the anchor, and relatively dense, homogeneously distributed, crystalline conglomerates arise on the exact position of these anchors (sometimes even structured as a single compact crystalline block depending on the type and concentration of matrix substance). It could be shown that the detection limit for analyte molecules improves with reduction of the surface area of the wetting surface.
  • the crystal conglomerates forming on the hydrophilic anchor surfaces reveal a microcrystalline structure suitable for the MALDI-process. As the speed of the drying process is increased, the crystalline structure becomes finer.
  • a “hydrophobic” surface is understood as a water repellant surface, i.e. one resistant to wetting by aqueous solutions.
  • a “hydrophilic” surface is understood as one that can be easily wetted by water.
  • “Oleophobic” and “oleophilic” (also referred to sometimes as “lipophobic” and “lipophilic”) refer to surfaces which repel or which can be wetted by oil, respectively.
  • Organic solvents that are not miscible with water usually have an oily nature in this meaning of wettability, i.e. they can wet oleophilic faces. They are as a rule miscible with oil.
  • Organic solvents that are miscible with water e.g. methanol, acetone or acetonitrile, can wet both oleophilic and hydrophilic surfaces in a pure state. However, the wettability of oleophilic surfaces reduces as the water content increases.
  • the hydrophobicity (oleophobicity, lyophobicity) can be measured essentially by measuring the contact angle which the liquid develops under standardized conditions at the edge of the wetting surface with the solid surface.
  • a surface of a material is referred to as hydrophobic, oleophobic or lyophobic if the contact angle of the respective liquid level in a capillary constructed from this material is more than 90°.
  • Such a definition is hard to apply to the contact angle of a droplet sitting on a flat surface since the droplet size actually plays a bigger role in this case.
  • hydrophilc and hydrophobic are not used in an absolute, but rather a relative sense: a surface is more hydrophobic towards a liquid than another surface if the contact angle is larger. In general, a surface is already regarded as hydrophobic if the contact angle is smaller than 90°, but a drop does not run on the surface to form a large wetting surface.
  • a surface is particularly designated as “hydrophobic” when a drop retracts on a surface during drying or aspiration with a pipette, reducing the wetted surface reduces in size and leaving behind a dry surface (so called “dynamic hydrophobia”).
  • biomolecules are best dissolved in water, sometimes with the addition of organic, water-soluble solvents such as alcohols, acetone or acetonitrile.
  • the analytical solutions of biomolecules sometimes also contain other substances such as glycols, glue-like buffering agents, salts, acids or bases depending on their preparation.
  • the MALDI process is disrupted considerably by the presence of these impurities, sometimes through prevention of protonation, and sometimes through the formation of adducts.
  • alkali ions often form adducts with analyte molecules of varying size and prevent any precise mass determination.
  • concentration of alkali ions in the sample preparation, as well as the concentration of other impurity substances must be kept extremely low by careful purification procedures.
  • affinity adsorption media similar to those used in affinity chromatography. While in affinity chromatography one uses highly bioselective affinity adsorbents, for the purification of initially unknown mixtures of biopolymers without losses of special types of biomolecules one needs non-specific adsorbents that can bind all biomolecular constituents of the mixture to as near a similar degree as possible.
  • sponge-like microspheres of adsorbent material such as POROS, a registered trademark of Perseptive Biosystems, Inc.
  • pipette tips filled with sponge-like adsorbent such as ZIPTIPs, a registered trademark of Millipore Corporation
  • C18 coated magnetized spheres such as GenoPure, a product of Bruker Daltonics, Inc.
  • biomolecules can be eluted using aqueous methanol or acetonitrile solutions, and elution can often be assisted by altering the pH-value.
  • purification with these materials is labor-intensive since it requires additional materials and additional procedural steps.
  • Affinity capture methods have become known also for biospecific selection of certain biomolecules in connection with mass spectrometric analysis, see e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,020,208, 6,027,942, or 5,894,063 (T. W. Hutchens and T. -T. Yip). Such biospecific affinity adsorption processes can be likewise used for purification.
  • the basic idea of the invention is to equip the surface of a strongly hydrophobic sample support plate with small, contingent, hydrophilic areas serving as anchors for sample droplets (as has already been methodically developed to the production stage by the applicant), but to apply affinity adsorbents (e.g. biospecific affinity chromatographic phases) to areas adjacent to the hydrophilic anchors.
  • the areas with affinity adsorbents are usually less hydrophobic than the lyophobic surface of the sample carrier, but much more hydrophobic than the hydrophilic anchor areas.
  • Such adsorbents should bind predetermined kinds of biosubstances from aqueous solutions and re-release them into solution upon wetting by so-called elution media or eluants.
  • hydrophilic anchor regions are chosen to be so small that when the sample is loaded in the form of not too small drops, the area covered by the sample droplet overlaps with the affinity region.
  • the biomolecules are then bound in these regions by affinity adsorption. In this bound state the biomolecules can then be washed with non-eluting liquids.
  • Such a zone with affinity adsorbents favorably forms a ring around the hydrophilic anchor, and the strongly hydrophobic surface region of the sample carrier plate surrounds this ring area.
  • the eluant is usually a mixture of a large part of organic solvent with a smaller part of water, it can have a very different composition, as is the case when elution is controlled by the pH value.
  • the eluant solution also should be able to solve the MALDI matrix substance.
  • the matrix substance can be already contained within the eluant solution when it is loaded on the sample carrier plate, or the matrix can be loaded in an extra step to the anchors before the eluant solution is loaded. In the latter case, some matrix substance is solved again in the eluant solution.
  • the eluant fluid droplets wet the affinity area so that the biomolecules are desorbed and solved again.
  • the droplets retract more and more from the affinity adsorbents towards the hydrophilic anchor areas, leaving behind the dry affinity adsorbent area, and a large part of the biomolecules is incorporated into the matrix crystals forming on the hydrophilic anchor surfaces.
  • the affinity adsorbents can act very bioselectively towards relatively few types of biosubstances, or very non-selectively towards a much wider range of biosubstances.
  • Non-selective affinity adsorbents are particularly suitable for the purification of peptide or oligonucleotide mixtures; these act via relatively nonselective hydrophobic bonds.
  • alkane chains varying in size between 4 and 18 carbon atoms (or even longer) can be used, so-called C4 to C18 coatings.
  • the alkane chains can be covalently bonded via, e.g., sulphur bridges directly to metal surfaces.
  • coatings with antibodies can be used that are bound in a known way to a specially prepared molecular layer which in turn is covalently bonded to the plate surface.
  • coatings with biotinylated counterstrands can for example be used which are easily bound to surface-bound strepatividin via strepatividin-biotin bonds.
  • biotin-streptavidin bond can even be reversed so that the strepatividin layer can then be coated with other counterstrands.
  • a surface of only one square millimeter suffices in order to bind several picomoles of analyte substances.
  • a coating density then arises which corresponds to only a tiny fraction of a monomolecular layer.
  • MALDI analysis can already be performed with merely a femtomole of each of the substances present.
  • affinity adsorbents with different bioselectivity each surrounding its own hydrophilic anchor, can be coated on a single carrier plate.
  • a small carrier plate of this type with about 4 to 10 affinity adsorbents may be exposed in total to a mixture of biomolecules in a sample fluid to measure a certain biomolecule profile of this sample.
  • the anchor surfaces can additionally be coated with cation exchanging (and therefore permanently hydrophilic) materials so that even the last cation residues can be removed.
  • sample carrier plates With careful cleaning, the sample carrier plates can be reused many times. The number of applications depends most of all upon contamination by usually high-molecular-weight, strongly hydrophobic substances which can no longer be washed away from the affinity adsorbent regions and may change the affinity characteristic.
  • FIG. 1A shows a metallic sample carrier plate ( 1 ) with hydrophilic anchors ( 2 ) and surrounding affinity regions ( 3 ) in strongly hydrophobic surroundings ( 4 ), with pipette-applied sample droplets ( 5 ) that cover large areas of the affinity regions by deforming under their own weight so that the biomolecules are affinely bound there.
  • the affinity regions can be coated with C18.
  • the hydrophilic anchors may be formed by the bare metal surface; organic-inorganic nanocomposite materials with about 4 micrometers thickness may form the strongly hydrophobic layer around the affinity regions.
  • FIG. 1B shows the same sample carrier plate after washing, drying, and application of the much smaller eluant fluid droplets ( 6 ) that wet the affinity region and resolubilize the biomolecules.
  • the eluant fluid might consist e.g. of 95% acetonitrile with 5% water, in which about 0.5% matrix substance is dissolved.
  • Eluant fluid droplets ( 7 ) during drying are represented in FIG. 1C. Since acetonitrile is essentially the only substance to evaporate initially, the mixture in which the matrix substance is dissolved now consists of about 50% acetonitrile and 50% water when the volume is reduced to 10% of the initially pipetted volume. This solution still acts as an eluant containing solved biomolecules, although it is already retracting from the affinity regions.
  • FIG. 1D depicts the matrix crystal conglomerates ( 8 ) on the hydrophilic anchors after complete drying of the eluant. The biomolecules are now found mainly within the crystal conglomerates.
  • sample supports constructed from metal or metal coated plastics, and also not to apply any further coating to these metal surfaces as hydrophilic anchor surfaces.
  • the metallic basis determines the acceleration potential for the ions produced by the ensuing MALDI process.
  • Special alloy high-grade stainless steels have proven especially suitable, although the same can be said of pure nickel surfaces. For this reason sample support plates, e.g. based on nickel-plated diecasting aluminum, can be constructed.
  • Layering with PTFE is usually not as thin and smooth as with nanocomposite materials, and in general is less usable since it is usually several hundred microns thick and tends to produce strong electrical surface charging during MALDI ionization which has negative effects on the mass spectra produced.
  • the areas becoming subsequently the anchor and affinity surfaces can be protected initially with resoluble protective lacquers using a special imprinting procedure, for example by imprinting round spots with a diameter of about 1.4 mm. After spraying and burning in the nanocomposite solution, the soluble lacquers are removed, re-exposing the imprinted areas.
  • the spots of protective lacquer determine the external diameters of the affinity rings. Diameters of about 0.8 to about 2 mm have proven suitable, with diameters of between 1.2 and 1.5 mm being particularly favorable because droplets of about 2 microliter just cover this area.
  • the areas becoming subsequently the hydrophilic anchor fields are imprinted with soluble protective lacquer, for example as round spots of 0.4 mm diameter sitting in the center of the subsequent affinity area.
  • the protective lacquer can be applied in the form of minute droplets, for example, using a printing device of the kind used in ink jet printers, although silk-screen (or mesh-screen) printing procedures have also proven suitable. With both procedures, a good positioning accuracy of lacquering is attainable. A good positioning accuracy is needed for the subsequent automatic MALDI-analysis procedure.
  • the hydrophilic anchor surfaces should ideally have diameters of between 100 and 800 micrometers, with those of 200, 400 and 600 micrometer in diameter having proven particularly favorable for a number of applications.
  • the next stage is that the rings around these anchor regions imprinted with protective lacquer are coated with affinity adsorbents.
  • the coating techniques are well known in principle to experts in chromatography.
  • C18 alkane coating the non-coated metal surface around the subsequent anchor regions can be covered by a self-organizing coating liquid using an aqueous solution of alkanthioates.
  • the alkane chains automatically bond directly to the metal surface covalently in a known manner via terminal sulphur bridges.
  • This covalent bonding is highly stable.
  • a particularly effective bonding is achieved when the surfaces are first electrolytically gold-plated.
  • other coating procedures involving alkane chains also exist, such as those involving electrical plasma.
  • the hydrophilic anchor regions can also be coated with ion exchanging layers.
  • NAFION a registered trademark of E.I. DuPont De Nemours and Company Corporation
  • a solution of adhesive can also be applied, which can be completely dusted over with a powder of ion exchanger material after almost complete drying. If a powder with particles of about 5 to 20 microns in diameter is employed (mesh 1000), a highly regular coating results after firm pressing, drying and vigorous washing; this has a high capacity to absorb alkali ions.
  • hydrophilicity of the anchor surfaces facilitates a uniform application.
  • Ion exchangers are always extremely hydrophilic by nature so that the anchor surfaces remain hydrophilic even after coating with ion exchangers.
  • sample droplets are usually applied with pipettes onto the hydrophilic anchor regions of the MALDI biosample supports.
  • Multiple pipettes are employed for the simultaneous application of many sample droplets from microtitration plates; pipette robots in pipette machines apply such multi-head pipettes (see for example DE 196 28 178).
  • the basic microwell array of the original microtiter plate consists of 96 microwells in an array with distances of 9 mm arranged 8 rows and 12 columns.
  • the form of the microtiter plate has been set as an industrial standard, although microtiter plates have been further developed to contain more microwells without changing their size. Modern implementations have 384, 864 or even 1536 microwells in grids of 4.5, 3.0 or 2.25 mm. These grid spacings can also be arranged for to the anchor fields on the purifying biosample supports.
  • droplet size of about 2 ⁇ l (easily and comfortably handled by the pipette robots)
  • grid spacings with 4.5 or 3.0 mm and 384 or 864 anchor fields appear to be particularly favorable on the support.
  • a droplet size of about 2 microliters should also be preferred since these droplets can be adequately and surely placed with automatic pipettes on the anchors, a situation which becomes more problematic with smaller droplet sizes.
  • the sample carrier plate Before or after complete drying of the samples the sample carrier plate can be easily washed using washing fluid (for example with clean water for C18 coatings) in order to free it of all slightly water-soluble substances. By careful rinsing with a large excess of washing fluid there is usually no risk of any cross-contamination of the samples. If a guarantee against cross-contamination is required, individual rinsing of the individual anchor regions can be performed, for example by pipette rinsing, whereby the washing fluid is introduced and aspirated repeatedly. Drying then follows.
  • washing fluid for example with clean water for C18 coatings
  • the matrix substances may be loaded in the usual way to the hydrophilic anchor areas before the eluant is loaded.
  • the eluant solvent then dissolves a lesser or larger part of the matrix substances, and the recrystallisation on the already existing residual crystal conglomerate is made easier.
  • the elution fluids are more easily capable to wet the affinity areas, much smaller volumes can be used for the drops; these can be deposited more easily onto the sample carrier plate from a pipette tip than can drops of pure water. Fluid quantities of about 200 to 500 nanoliters are sufficient, corresponding to droplet diameters of between 0.8 and 1 mm.
  • biomolecules With a correct choice of water and matrix substance solution only a few biomolecules remain on the affinity coating. The biomolecules are incorporated to a large extent within the matrix crystals or at the boundary surfaces between the crystals.
  • sample droplets at the start of coating proceeds conveniently when the multiple pipette is positioned at a distance of between 500 to 800 microns above the sample carrier plate. Approximately two microliters of sample solution are pipetted onto the sample support from each pipette tip of the multiple pipette; the diameter of free droplets is then about 1.6 millimeters.
  • the pipette tips should be hydrophobic so that the application of the droplets is facilitated.
  • the quantity of sample solution is usually sealed off in the pipette tip by a gas bubble so that no surplus solution is available in the channel of the pipette tip and the contact forces to the hydrophobic pipette tip are very small. In this way the drop can be reliably deposited on the sample carrier plate.
  • drying droplets develop vigorous swirling fluid currents in their interior so that virtually all the biomolecules at some point come into contact with the affinity regions where they are affinely bound and therefore retained.
  • Washing can begin before the droplets are completely dried. In this way one can prevent impurities drying first so that they must then be resolubilized; this is sometimes a complicated process. Under certain circumstances, depending on the type of sample preparation and the associated impurities, one can postpone the washing until the droplets are completely dried.
  • small metal or metallized strips can be used, equipped with only a smaller number of hydrophilic anchor areas which however are surrounded each by an affinity adsorption ring of different biospecificity. These strips then may be immersed completely into a solution of a mixture of biomolecules, e.g. diluted blood, to adsorb different groups of biosubstances on the different affinity regions and to analyze complete profiles of biosubstances like proteins.
  • the strips may contain 3 to 10 different affinity areas, but larger numbers are also possible, depending on the analytical task. Washing then may be performed as described above.
  • the elution process is initiated on both types of sample carriers by the introduction of small quantities of eluant solution with dissolved matrix substance on each of the hydrophilic anchors, spreading out at the affinity regions and desorbing and resolving the biomolecules.
  • the type of matrix substance depends on the analytical task; in principle hundreds of substances are known, even if only a handful of these are used frequently. These are all known to the mass spectrometry specialist.
  • the matrix substances may be contained in the eluant solution, or may be deposited before elution on the hydrophilic anchors, and thus will be partly resolved by the eluant solution.
  • the droplets of the eluant fluid retract (in most cases intermittently) more and more from the affinity surfaces since the hydrophobia towards the affinity surface increases steadily due to preferential evaporation of the organic solvents.
  • the last stage of drying leaves the crystal conglomerates with the largest part of the biomolecules exactly on the hydrophilic anchor regions as shown schematically in figure ID.
  • the lumpy MALDI samples are therefore positioned exactly as desired on their already known positions. Their size can be set in such a way that it corresponds to the focal surfaces of the laser beams. In addition they offer a high yield of analyte ions; they are thus ideally prepared for automatic analyses procedures.
  • these monolithic lumps display a very good and (from lump to lump) reproducible ionization of the incorporated biomolecules, at least as good as the most favorable locations arduously sought for with the previously described type of preparation.
  • Adduct formation with alkali ions is much lower, and can even be completely suppressed by ion exchange materials.
  • the analyte molecules are probably embedded in a location which is highly favorable for the desorption and ionization process, at the boundaries between the grains of the microcrystalline structure.

Abstract

The invention relates to sample support plates with hydrophilic anchors in a strongly hydrophobic environment for mass spectroscopic analysis of biosubstances with ionization by matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization (MALDI), procedures for manufacturing these sample supports, and connected procedures for loading these sample supports with biomolecular samples. The invention provides areas with affinity adsorbents adjacent to the hydrophilic anchors for purifying biosubstances and, if wanted, for performing an affinity selection of biosubstances, whereby the finally prepared matrix sample crystals with the biosubstances for the MALDI analysis are well localized on the hydrophilic anchors.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • Mass spectrometry involving ionization by matrix-assisted laser desorption (MALDI) has established itself as a standard procedure for the analysis of biosubstances with large molecules. For this purpose, time-of-flight mass spectrometers (TOF-MS) are usually employed, although Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance spectrometers (FT-ICR) or radio frequency quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometers (in short: ion traps) have also been utilized. [0001]
  • In the following, the molecules of biosubstances to be studied will be referred to simply as “analyte molecules” or “biomolecules”. In all cases, analyte molecules are present either in very diluted form in aqueous solutions, pure or mixed with organic solvents. Sometimes these analytical solutions are very complex and dirty with respect to the requirements of the analytical procedures, e.g., in the case of body fluids. [0002]
  • The biosubstances include all biopolymers and sometimes other substances with large molecules such as corticosteroids. “Biopolymers” comprise oligonucleotides (i.e. fragments of genetic material in various forms such as DNA or RNA), polysaccharides and proteins (the essential building blocks of the living world) as well as their special analogues and conjugates such as glycoproteins or lipoproteins, and peptides arising from the action of digestive enzymes. [0003]
  • The selection of matrix substance for MALDI depends on the type of analyte molecule; more than a hundred different matrix substances are now known. One of the tasks of the matrix substances is to isolate the analyte molecules from each other wherever possible and bind them to the sample support, to transfer the molecules into the vapor phase by forming a vapor cloud during the laser bombardment, and ultimately to ionize the biomolecules by protonation or deprotonation. For this task it has proven useful to incorporate the analyte molecules individually in the crystals of the matrix substances during their crystallization, or at least finely distributed in the boundary areas between the crystals. Here it seems important to separate the analyte molecules from each other, i.e., no clusters of analyte molecules should be allowed in the prepared matrix crystal sample. [0004]
  • A variety of procedures are known for applying analytes and matrices. The simplest of these entails the pipetting of a solution containing analyte and matrix onto a cleaned, metallic sample support. The drop of solution wets a certain area of the metal surface (or its oxide layer) whose size on hydrophilic surfaces is many times larger than that of the diameter of a drop. The size depends on the hydrophilicity and the microstructuring of the metal surface as well as on the properties of the droplet, in particular that of the solvent. After drying of the solution, a sample spot consisting of small matrix crystals forms that is the same size as that of the originally wetted surface area. The matrix crystals are usually not uniformly distributed throughout the formerly wetted area. As a rule, crystals of the matrix start growing at the inner margin of the wetting surface on the metal plate. They then grow towards the interior of the wetting surface. They often form thin needle crystals, as is the case for example for the frequently used matrices 5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) or 3-hydroxypicolinic acid (HPA), which often stand out from the carrier plate at the interior of the spot. The center of the spot is frequently empty or covered with fine crystals, although often they cannot be used for MALDI ionization because of their high concentration of alkaline salts. The loading of the crystals with biomolecules is also very uneven. This type of loading therefore requires viewing of the sample support surface during MALDI ionization by a video microscope which can be found in any commercially available mass spectrometer used for this type of analysis. Ion yield and mass resolution vary in the sample spot from place to place. It is often an arduous process to find a suitable position on the sample spot with a satisfactory analyte ion yield and mass resolution, and only experience, trial and error allow for improvements. [0005]
  • Although there are control programs for mass spectrometers with algorithms for automatically seeking the best spots for MALDI-ionization, such procedures, involving many attempts and evaluations, are necessarily very slow. [0006]
  • With other loading procedures the matrix substance is already present on the carrier plate before application of the solvent droplets, which now only contain analyte molecules. [0007]
  • If the surface of the sample carrier plate is not hydrophilic, but hydrophobic, smaller crystal conglomerates are formed, but the droplets tend to wander in an uncontrollable manner during drying. Hence the localization of the crystal conglomerates cannot be predicted and must be sought during the MALDI process. Furthermore, there is a considerable risk that droplets will conglomerate and thus render a separate analysis of samples impossible. [0008]
  • Biosample analyses are now performed in their thousands, a situation which demands automatic high throughput procedures. A visual control or search, or even an automated search, would obstruct such a high throughput procedure. [0009]
  • A procedure has now been developed by the applicant which leads to local and size-defined crystallization fields on small hydrophilic anchor regions of 100 to 800 micrometer in diameter within an otherwise hydrophobic surface (DE 197 54 978 C2). The aqueous drops are fixed by the hydrophilic anchors and prevented from wandering even when they initially rest on surrounding lyophobic areas due to their weight. During drying the droplets withdraw onto the anchor, and relatively dense, homogeneously distributed, crystalline conglomerates arise on the exact position of these anchors (sometimes even structured as a single compact crystalline block depending on the type and concentration of matrix substance). It could be shown that the detection limit for analyte molecules improves with reduction of the surface area of the wetting surface. Thus, smaller quantities of analytes and more diluted solutions can be worked with during sample preparation; such an advantage is expressed in better running biochemical preparatory procedures and reductions in chemical material costs. With a suitable preparation the analytical sensitivity over the surface of the sample is highly uniform. Thus the ionization process can be freed from the need to perform visual or automated searches for favorable sites; instead a “blind” bombardment of the crystal conglomerates with desorbing laser light can be used. This preparation method for prelocated spots of equal sensitivity accelerates the analytical process. [0010]
  • The crystal conglomerates forming on the hydrophilic anchor surfaces reveal a microcrystalline structure suitable for the MALDI-process. As the speed of the drying process is increased, the crystalline structure becomes finer. [0011]
  • Here a “hydrophobic” surface is understood as a water repellant surface, i.e. one resistant to wetting by aqueous solutions. Correspondingly, a “hydrophilic” surface is understood as one that can be easily wetted by water. “Oleophobic” and “oleophilic” (also referred to sometimes as “lipophobic” and “lipophilic”) refer to surfaces which repel or which can be wetted by oil, respectively. Organic solvents that are not miscible with water usually have an oily nature in this meaning of wettability, i.e. they can wet oleophilic faces. They are as a rule miscible with oil. Organic solvents that are miscible with water, e.g. methanol, acetone or acetonitrile, can wet both oleophilic and hydrophilic surfaces in a pure state. However, the wettability of oleophilic surfaces reduces as the water content increases. [0012]
  • An opinion persisted for a long time that hydrophobic surfaces are always also oleophilic, and that oleophobic surfaces are always hydrophilic. However, for some years it has been known that surfaces exist which are both hydrophobic and oleophobic; these include smooth surfaces of perfluorinated hydrocarbons such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). Such surfaces are designated here as “lyophobic”, a term which has been adopted from colloidal science. [0013]
  • Recently, it has also become known that the wetting or liquid repelling character of a surface strongly depends on its microstructure. An example of this is the so called “lotus effect” (named after the lotus-plant). [0014]
  • The hydrophobicity (oleophobicity, lyophobicity) can be measured essentially by measuring the contact angle which the liquid develops under standardized conditions at the edge of the wetting surface with the solid surface. In an absolute sense a surface of a material is referred to as hydrophobic, oleophobic or lyophobic if the contact angle of the respective liquid level in a capillary constructed from this material is more than 90°. Such a definition is hard to apply to the contact angle of a droplet sitting on a flat surface since the droplet size actually plays a bigger role in this case. In the following, the terms hydrophilc and hydrophobic are not used in an absolute, but rather a relative sense: a surface is more hydrophobic towards a liquid than another surface if the contact angle is larger. In general, a surface is already regarded as hydrophobic if the contact angle is smaller than 90°, but a drop does not run on the surface to form a large wetting surface. [0015]
  • A surface is particularly designated as “hydrophobic” when a drop retracts on a surface during drying or aspiration with a pipette, reducing the wetted surface reduces in size and leaving behind a dry surface (so called “dynamic hydrophobia”). [0016]
  • As a rule, biomolecules are best dissolved in water, sometimes with the addition of organic, water-soluble solvents such as alcohols, acetone or acetonitrile. The analytical solutions of biomolecules sometimes also contain other substances such as glycols, glue-like buffering agents, salts, acids or bases depending on their preparation. The MALDI process is disrupted considerably by the presence of these impurities, sometimes through prevention of protonation, and sometimes through the formation of adducts. In particular, alkali ions often form adducts with analyte molecules of varying size and prevent any precise mass determination. The concentration of alkali ions in the sample preparation, as well as the concentration of other impurity substances must be kept extremely low by careful purification procedures. [0017]
  • For purification and simultaneous enrichment of biomolecules one can use so-called affinity adsorption media similar to those used in affinity chromatography. While in affinity chromatography one uses highly bioselective affinity adsorbents, for the purification of initially unknown mixtures of biopolymers without losses of special types of biomolecules one needs non-specific adsorbents that can bind all biomolecular constituents of the mixture to as near a similar degree as possible. [0018]
  • For purification of peptides, proteins or DNA mixtures, sponge-like microspheres of adsorbent material (such as POROS, a registered trademark of Perseptive Biosystems, Inc.), pipette tips filled with sponge-like adsorbent (such as ZIPTIPs, a registered trademark of Millipore Corporation) or C18 coated magnetized spheres (such as GenoPure, a product of Bruker Daltonics, Inc.) have proven particularly useful until now. These materials are all strongly oleophilic and bind peptides or oligonucleotides via hydrophobic bonds. As a rule, biomolecules can be eluted using aqueous methanol or acetonitrile solutions, and elution can often be assisted by altering the pH-value. However, purification with these materials is labor-intensive since it requires additional materials and additional procedural steps. [0019]
  • Affinity capture methods have become known also for biospecific selection of certain biomolecules in connection with mass spectrometric analysis, see e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,020,208, 6,027,942, or 5,894,063 (T. W. Hutchens and T. -T. Yip). Such biospecific affinity adsorption processes can be likewise used for purification. [0020]
  • As an alternative or additional procedure one can also remove noxious cations by substitution with ion exchangers. A procedure has also been developed by us to accomplish this (DE 199 23 761 C2). [0021]
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The basic idea of the invention is to equip the surface of a strongly hydrophobic sample support plate with small, contingent, hydrophilic areas serving as anchors for sample droplets (as has already been methodically developed to the production stage by the applicant), but to apply affinity adsorbents (e.g. biospecific affinity chromatographic phases) to areas adjacent to the hydrophilic anchors. The areas with affinity adsorbents are usually less hydrophobic than the lyophobic surface of the sample carrier, but much more hydrophobic than the hydrophilic anchor areas. Such adsorbents should bind predetermined kinds of biosubstances from aqueous solutions and re-release them into solution upon wetting by so-called elution media or eluants. [0022]
  • The hydrophilic anchor regions are chosen to be so small that when the sample is loaded in the form of not too small drops, the area covered by the sample droplet overlaps with the affinity region. The biomolecules are then bound in these regions by affinity adsorption. In this bound state the biomolecules can then be washed with non-eluting liquids. [0023]
  • Such a zone with affinity adsorbents favorably forms a ring around the hydrophilic anchor, and the strongly hydrophobic surface region of the sample carrier plate surrounds this ring area. [0024]
  • Although the eluant is usually a mixture of a large part of organic solvent with a smaller part of water, it can have a very different composition, as is the case when elution is controlled by the pH value. For the MALDI sample preparation the eluant solution also should be able to solve the MALDI matrix substance. The matrix substance can be already contained within the eluant solution when it is loaded on the sample carrier plate, or the matrix can be loaded in an extra step to the anchors before the eluant solution is loaded. In the latter case, some matrix substance is solved again in the eluant solution. The eluant fluid droplets wet the affinity area so that the biomolecules are desorbed and solved again. During drying of the eluant solution, the droplets retract more and more from the affinity adsorbents towards the hydrophilic anchor areas, leaving behind the dry affinity adsorbent area, and a large part of the biomolecules is incorporated into the matrix crystals forming on the hydrophilic anchor surfaces. [0025]
  • Depending on the analytical task, the affinity adsorbents can act very bioselectively towards relatively few types of biosubstances, or very non-selectively towards a much wider range of biosubstances. Non-selective affinity adsorbents are particularly suitable for the purification of peptide or oligonucleotide mixtures; these act via relatively nonselective hydrophobic bonds. [0026]
  • As example for a non-selective, hydrophobic binding of peptides, proteins or oligonucleotides, surface bound alkane chains varying in size between [0027] 4 and 18 carbon atoms (or even longer) can be used, so-called C4 to C18 coatings. The alkane chains can be covalently bonded via, e.g., sulphur bridges directly to metal surfaces. As examples for extremely bioselective affinity adsorbents, coatings with antibodies can be used that are bound in a known way to a specially prepared molecular layer which in turn is covalently bonded to the plate surface. For oligonucleotides, coatings with biotinylated counterstrands can for example be used which are easily bound to surface-bound strepatividin via strepatividin-biotin bonds. Here the biotin-streptavidin bond can even be reversed so that the strepatividin layer can then be coated with other counterstrands.
  • A surface of only one square millimeter suffices in order to bind several picomoles of analyte substances. A coating density then arises which corresponds to only a tiny fraction of a monomolecular layer. However, MALDI analysis can already be performed with merely a femtomole of each of the substances present. [0028]
  • For special analytical procedures several affinity adsorbents with different bioselectivity, each surrounding its own hydrophilic anchor, can be coated on a single carrier plate. A small carrier plate of this type with about 4 to 10 affinity adsorbents may be exposed in total to a mixture of biomolecules in a sample fluid to measure a certain biomolecule profile of this sample. [0029]
  • The anchor surfaces can additionally be coated with cation exchanging (and therefore permanently hydrophilic) materials so that even the last cation residues can be removed. [0030]
  • With careful cleaning, the sample carrier plates can be reused many times. The number of applications depends most of all upon contamination by usually high-molecular-weight, strongly hydrophobic substances which can no longer be washed away from the affinity adsorbent regions and may change the affinity characteristic.[0031]
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1A shows a metallic sample carrier plate ([0032] 1) with hydrophilic anchors (2) and surrounding affinity regions (3) in strongly hydrophobic surroundings (4), with pipette-applied sample droplets (5) that cover large areas of the affinity regions by deforming under their own weight so that the biomolecules are affinely bound there. For non-sective washing the affinity regions can be coated with C18. The hydrophilic anchors may be formed by the bare metal surface; organic-inorganic nanocomposite materials with about 4 micrometers thickness may form the strongly hydrophobic layer around the affinity regions.
  • FIG. 1B shows the same sample carrier plate after washing, drying, and application of the much smaller eluant fluid droplets ([0033] 6) that wet the affinity region and resolubilize the biomolecules. Hereby, the eluant fluid might consist e.g. of 95% acetonitrile with 5% water, in which about 0.5% matrix substance is dissolved.
  • Eluant fluid droplets ([0034] 7) during drying are represented in FIG. 1C. Since acetonitrile is essentially the only substance to evaporate initially, the mixture in which the matrix substance is dissolved now consists of about 50% acetonitrile and 50% water when the volume is reduced to 10% of the initially pipetted volume. This solution still acts as an eluant containing solved biomolecules, although it is already retracting from the affinity regions.
  • FIG. 1D depicts the matrix crystal conglomerates ([0035] 8) on the hydrophilic anchors after complete drying of the eluant. The biomolecules are now found mainly within the crystal conglomerates.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • The convenient preparation of biosample supports with purification properties shall be described at first together with their form. Following this, corresponding purifying loading procedures will be described. [0036]
  • Well-cleaned, fat-free surfaces used for metallic sample carriers in MALDI are as a rule sufficiently hydrophilic by nature towards the aqueous sample solutions; a sample droplet usually widens to a spot size corresponding to several droplet diameters. The hydrophilicity is produced by the hydroxyl groups at the metal surface which form as a result of the action of moist air on any metal (even on noble metals). [0037]
  • In order to facilitate production, it is entirely appropriate for this invention to utilize sample supports constructed from metal or metal coated plastics, and also not to apply any further coating to these metal surfaces as hydrophilic anchor surfaces. The metallic basis determines the acceleration potential for the ions produced by the ensuing MALDI process. Special alloy high-grade stainless steels have proven especially suitable, although the same can be said of pure nickel surfaces. For this reason sample support plates, e.g. based on nickel-plated diecasting aluminum, can be constructed. [0038]
  • The surface of the sample supports external to both the hydrophilic anchors and the areas which will later be coated with affinity adsorbents must now be made lyophobic. [0039]
  • Recently a number of procedures have been developed for producing lyophobic surfaces. Apart from the already known coating with perfluorinated substances such as PTFE (for example with TEFLON, a registered trademark of E.I. DuPont De Nemours and Company Corporation), coating with organic-inorganic sol gel nanocomposite materials represents a favorable alternative (DE 41 18 184), see for example R. Kasemann, H. Schmidt, S. Brück, Bol. Soc. Esp. Ceram. Vid. 31-6, Vol. 7, (1992), 75. The nanocomposite materials can be burned into metals, glass or plastics as layers which are only a few microns thick, very smooth and scratch-resistant. Layering with PTFE is usually not as thin and smooth as with nanocomposite materials, and in general is less usable since it is usually several hundred microns thick and tends to produce strong electrical surface charging during MALDI ionization which has negative effects on the mass spectra produced. [0040]
  • The areas becoming subsequently the anchor and affinity surfaces, can be protected initially with resoluble protective lacquers using a special imprinting procedure, for example by imprinting round spots with a diameter of about 1.4 mm. After spraying and burning in the nanocomposite solution, the soluble lacquers are removed, re-exposing the imprinted areas. The spots of protective lacquer determine the external diameters of the affinity rings. Diameters of about 0.8 to about 2 mm have proven suitable, with diameters of between 1.2 and 1.5 mm being particularly favorable because droplets of about 2 microliter just cover this area. [0041]
  • In a second imprinting procedure the areas becoming subsequently the hydrophilic anchor fields are imprinted with soluble protective lacquer, for example as round spots of 0.4 mm diameter sitting in the center of the subsequent affinity area. The protective lacquer can be applied in the form of minute droplets, for example, using a printing device of the kind used in ink jet printers, although silk-screen (or mesh-screen) printing procedures have also proven suitable. With both procedures, a good positioning accuracy of lacquering is attainable. A good positioning accuracy is needed for the subsequent automatic MALDI-analysis procedure. [0042]
  • The hydrophilic anchor surfaces should ideally have diameters of between 100 and 800 micrometers, with those of 200, 400 and 600 micrometer in diameter having proven particularly favorable for a number of applications. [0043]
  • The next stage is that the rings around these anchor regions imprinted with protective lacquer are coated with affinity adsorbents. The coating techniques are well known in principle to experts in chromatography. With C18 alkane coating, the non-coated metal surface around the subsequent anchor regions can be covered by a self-organizing coating liquid using an aqueous solution of alkanthioates. Hereby, the alkane chains automatically bond directly to the metal surface covalently in a known manner via terminal sulphur bridges. This covalent bonding is highly stable. A particularly effective bonding is achieved when the surfaces are first electrolytically gold-plated. However, other coating procedures involving alkane chains also exist, such as those involving electrical plasma. [0044]
  • The dissolution of protective lacquer spots on the anchor regions completes the preparation of the biosample carrier plates with selection and cleaning functionality. These sample supports now have central, metallic, hydrophilic anchors, each with a diameter of e.g. 0.4 mm, around which there are ring-shaped areas with affinity adsorbents. These areas may be coated with C18, for example, for a selection-free purification of peptide mixtures, and can have an external diameter of about 1.4 mm. [0045]
  • In a further development of the invention the hydrophilic anchor regions can also be coated with ion exchanging layers. NAFION (a registered trademark of E.I. DuPont De Nemours and Company Corporation), for example, can be applied as a solution. The solution forms small droplets on the hydrophilic anchors which leave behind a NAFION film after evaporation of the solvent. A solution of adhesive can also be applied, which can be completely dusted over with a powder of ion exchanger material after almost complete drying. If a powder with particles of about 5 to 20 microns in diameter is employed (mesh 1000), a highly regular coating results after firm pressing, drying and vigorous washing; this has a high capacity to absorb alkali ions. It is also possible to polymerize the materials directly onto the hydrophilic anchor surface. Here as well, the hydrophilicity of the anchor surfaces facilitates a uniform application. Ion exchangers are always extremely hydrophilic by nature so that the anchor surfaces remain hydrophilic even after coating with ion exchangers. [0046]
  • The sample droplets are usually applied with pipettes onto the hydrophilic anchor regions of the MALDI biosample supports. Multiple pipettes are employed for the simultaneous application of many sample droplets from microtitration plates; pipette robots in pipette machines apply such multi-head pipettes (see for example DE 196 28 178). [0047]
  • It is therefore particularly favorable to use sample supports of the same dimensions as microtiter plates and to adapt the array of the hydrophilic anchor regions to that of the microtiter plates. It is also favorable if the sample supports have the same form as a microtiter plate, since they can then be processed and transported using standard pipette robots. Since a higher sample density can be achieved on the sample support than is possible with most microtiter plates used, the array of samples on the sample support can be finer than that corresponding to the microtiter plate. This can be achieved for example by a division of the microtiter plate microwell distances by integer numbers. In this way samples from several microtiter plates can be applied to a single sample support. [0048]
  • The basic microwell array of the original microtiter plate consists of 96 microwells in an array with distances of 9 mm arranged 8 rows and 12 columns. The form of the microtiter plate has been set as an industrial standard, although microtiter plates have been further developed to contain more microwells without changing their size. Modern implementations have 384, 864 or even 1536 microwells in grids of 4.5, 3.0 or 2.25 mm. These grid spacings can also be arranged for to the anchor fields on the purifying biosample supports. Regarding a droplet size of about 2 μl (easily and comfortably handled by the pipette robots), grid spacings with 4.5 or 3.0 mm and 384 or 864 anchor fields appear to be particularly favorable on the support. A droplet size of about 2 microliters should also be preferred since these droplets can be adequately and surely placed with automatic pipettes on the anchors, a situation which becomes more problematic with smaller droplet sizes. [0049]
  • When pipetting a drop of an aqueous biopolymer sample solution with a volume of about two microliters onto a hydrophilic anchor with a diameter of 400 microns, for example, a mushroom cap shaped drop forms with a diameter of about 1.5 to 2 millimeters. Under its own gravity it covers and wets a larger portion of the affinity adsorptive oleophilic ring (external diameter about 1.4 mm, for example). Such a covering is depicted in FIG. 1A. With an ideal embodiment of the carrier plate and the coating procedure, the lyophobic surroundings with even stronger hydrophobicity would not be wetted at all. While the droplet is drying, at which time vigorous fluid currents develop within it (which bring all molecules within the droplet many times into contact with the oleophilic surface of the affinity adsorbent), these molecules, due to their affinity towards oleophilic surfaces, will be bound by so-called hydrophobic binding, while the other, in general easily water soluble solution constituents will not be deposited until last on the surface, and then primarily on the hydrophilic anchors. [0050]
  • Before or after complete drying of the samples the sample carrier plate can be easily washed using washing fluid (for example with clean water for C18 coatings) in order to free it of all slightly water-soluble substances. By careful rinsing with a large excess of washing fluid there is usually no risk of any cross-contamination of the samples. If a guarantee against cross-contamination is required, individual rinsing of the individual anchor regions can be performed, for example by pipette rinsing, whereby the washing fluid is introduced and aspirated repeatedly. Drying then follows. [0051]
  • After drying, drops of organic solvents with small proportions of water and dissolved matrix substance are introduced as elution medium. The solvent containing small proportions of water and matrix substance immediately wets the affinity coating and releases the hydrophobically bound biopolymer molecules into the matrix solution. During drying the organic solvent evaporates first (e.g. methanol, acetone or acetonitrile); the increasing concentration of water and the rapidly decreasing volume allows the drop to shrink (often intermittently) more and more onto the anchor until the matrix substance crystallizes and the analyte molecules are incorporated there. [0052]
  • Alternatively the matrix substances may be loaded in the usual way to the hydrophilic anchor areas before the eluant is loaded. The eluant solvent then dissolves a lesser or larger part of the matrix substances, and the recrystallisation on the already existing residual crystal conglomerate is made easier. [0053]
  • Since the elution fluids are more easily capable to wet the affinity areas, much smaller volumes can be used for the drops; these can be deposited more easily onto the sample carrier plate from a pipette tip than can drops of pure water. Fluid quantities of about 200 to 500 nanoliters are sufficient, corresponding to droplet diameters of between 0.8 and 1 mm. [0054]
  • With a correct choice of water and matrix substance solution only a few biomolecules remain on the affinity coating. The biomolecules are incorporated to a large extent within the matrix crystals or at the boundary surfaces between the crystals. [0055]
  • Application of sample droplets at the start of coating proceeds conveniently when the multiple pipette is positioned at a distance of between 500 to 800 microns above the sample carrier plate. Approximately two microliters of sample solution are pipetted onto the sample support from each pipette tip of the multiple pipette; the diameter of free droplets is then about 1.6 millimeters. The pipette tips should be hydrophobic so that the application of the droplets is facilitated. The quantity of sample solution is usually sealed off in the pipette tip by a gas bubble so that no surplus solution is available in the channel of the pipette tip and the contact forces to the hydrophobic pipette tip are very small. In this way the drop can be reliably deposited on the sample carrier plate. [0056]
  • The drying droplets develop vigorous swirling fluid currents in their interior so that virtually all the biomolecules at some point come into contact with the affinity regions where they are affinely bound and therefore retained. [0057]
  • Washing can begin before the droplets are completely dried. In this way one can prevent impurities drying first so that they must then be resolubilized; this is sometimes a complicated process. Under certain circumstances, depending on the type of sample preparation and the associated impurities, one can postpone the washing until the droplets are completely dried. [0058]
  • Alternatively to the use of carrier plates in the size of microtiter plates, small metal or metallized strips can be used, equipped with only a smaller number of hydrophilic anchor areas which however are surrounded each by an affinity adsorption ring of different biospecificity. These strips then may be immersed completely into a solution of a mixture of biomolecules, e.g. diluted blood, to adsorb different groups of biosubstances on the different affinity regions and to analyze complete profiles of biosubstances like proteins. The strips may contain 3 to 10 different affinity areas, but larger numbers are also possible, depending on the analytical task. Washing then may be performed as described above. [0059]
  • After washing, the elution process is initiated on both types of sample carriers by the introduction of small quantities of eluant solution with dissolved matrix substance on each of the hydrophilic anchors, spreading out at the affinity regions and desorbing and resolving the biomolecules. The type of matrix substance depends on the analytical task; in principle hundreds of substances are known, even if only a handful of these are used frequently. These are all known to the mass spectrometry specialist. The matrix substances may be contained in the eluant solution, or may be deposited before elution on the hydrophilic anchors, and thus will be partly resolved by the eluant solution. [0060]
  • During drying, the droplets of the eluant fluid retract (in most cases intermittently) more and more from the affinity surfaces since the hydrophobia towards the affinity surface increases steadily due to preferential evaporation of the organic solvents. The last stage of drying leaves the crystal conglomerates with the largest part of the biomolecules exactly on the hydrophilic anchor regions as shown schematically in figure ID. The lumpy MALDI samples are therefore positioned exactly as desired on their already known positions. Their size can be set in such a way that it corresponds to the focal surfaces of the laser beams. In addition they offer a high yield of analyte ions; they are thus ideally prepared for automatic analyses procedures. [0061]
  • Surprisingly, these monolithic lumps display a very good and (from lump to lump) reproducible ionization of the incorporated biomolecules, at least as good as the most favorable locations arduously sought for with the previously described type of preparation. Adduct formation with alkali ions is much lower, and can even be completely suppressed by ion exchange materials. The analyte molecules are probably embedded in a location which is highly favorable for the desorption and ionization process, at the boundaries between the grains of the microcrystalline structure. [0062]
  • The droplets can of course also be applied manually; there are many possible ways to use the sample supports described here, as any expert in this area shall become aware of after reading this report. [0063]
  • From the nature and course of the cleaning and drying processes it follows that certain compositions of sample solutions should be avoided. Supplementation with surfactants or detergents is harmful since a wetting of the hydrophibic or even lyophobic surfaces can occur under such conditions. It should also be apparent to any expert after reading this report how he/she should carry out sample preparation and pipetting procedures in order to avoid any erroneous application of samples. [0064]
  • Both hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces can change their wetting qualities during long term storage in ambient air due to the deposition of air contaminants. It is therefore advisable to store the sample supports in a vacuum or under an atmosphere of a clean protective gas. [0065]

Claims (18)

1. A sample support plate with a flat surface for mass spectroscopic analysis of biomolecules with ionization by matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization and with hydrophilic anchor regions on an otherwise hydrophobic or lyophobic surface, wherein areas with affinity adsorbents for the biomolecules to be analyzed are located adjacent to the hydrophilic anchor regions.
2. A sample support plate according to claim 1, wherein the areas with affinity adsorbents form rings around the hydrophilic anchor regions, and are themselves surrounded by the hydrophobic layer of the sample support plate.
3. A sample support plate according to claim 1, wherein the size and form of the sample support plate is similar to that of a microtiter plate and wherein the hydrophilic anchor regions form an array corresponding to the basic quadratic array of 9 millimeters for individual microwells of a microtitration plate or a finer array arising from that by division by an integer number.
4. A sample support plate according to claim 1, wherein non-selective affinity adsorbents are used for purifying biomolecular mixtures.
5. A sample support plate according to claim 4, wherein covalently surface-bound alkane chains are used as affinity adsorbents.
6. A sample support plate according to claim 1, wherein bioselective affinity adsorbents are used for screening and purification of specific groups of biosubstances.
7. A sample support plate according to claim 1, wherein the hydrophilic anchor areas are accompanied by affinity areas of different biospecificity.
8. A sample support plate according to claim 7, wherein the size and form of the sample support plate has the shape of a small strip.
9. A sample support plate according to claim 8, wherein there are only a number of 3 to 10 anchor areas with accompanying affinity areas of different biospecificity on the strip.
10. A method for manufacturing a sample support plate according to claim 1, wherein the sample support plate is manufactured initially with a hydrophilic, flat surface, and coated with lyophobic and affinity adsorption layers after imprinting the surfaces to be not coated with a resoluble printing dye.
11. A method according to claim 10, wherein imprinting is carried out with a silk-screen printing procedure.
12. A method according to claim 10, wherein imprinting is carried out by an ink jet printer.
13. A method for loading purified biomolecules from largely unpurified analytical biosample solutions to a sample support plate for a subsequent mass spectroscopic analysis with ionization by matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization (MALDI), comprising the following steps:
(a) providing a sample support plate with affinity adsorption areas each adjacent to a hydrophilic anchor area on an otherwise strongly hydrophobic plate surface,
(b) exposing the affinity adsorption areas to analytical sample solutions containing the biomolecules, thereby adsorbing the biomolecules to be analyzed,
(c) washing the sample support plate including the adsorbed biomolecules,
(d) desorbing the adsorbed biomolecules by an eluant solution which also contains matrix substance, and
(e) drying the eluant solution, thereby forming matrix crystals containing desorbed biomolecules on the hydrophilic anchor areas.
14. A method according to claim 13, wherein in step (a) a sample support plate with adsorption areas of different biospecificities is provided, and wherein, in the exposing step (b), the sample support plate is completely immersed in the analytical sample solution to adsorb different types of biomolecules on different adsorption areas.
15. A method according to claim 13, wherein in step (b) the affinity adsorption areas are exposed to the analytical sample solution by application of drops of the analytical sample solution larger in size than the hydrophilic anchor areas, so that the drops on the sample support plate overlap with the affinity adsorption areas.
16. A method according to claim 13, wherein the matrix substance is loaded onto the hydrophilic anchor areas between steps (c) and (d), and partially re-dissolved in step (d).
17. A method according to claim 13, wherein the affinity adsorption areas on the sample support plates provided in step (a) form rings around the hydrophilic anchor areas.
18. A method according to claim 13, wherein the eluant solution applied in step (d) is an organic solvent with a small part of water.
US09/943,076 2000-09-01 2001-08-30 Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for manufacturing and use Abandoned US20020045270A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/828,153 US7399640B2 (en) 2000-09-01 2004-04-20 Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for use

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE10043042.2 2000-09-01
DE10043042A DE10043042C2 (en) 2000-09-01 2000-09-01 Method for loading a sample carrier with biomolecules for mass spectrometric analysis

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/828,153 Division US7399640B2 (en) 2000-09-01 2004-04-20 Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for use

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20020045270A1 true US20020045270A1 (en) 2002-04-18

Family

ID=7654595

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/943,076 Abandoned US20020045270A1 (en) 2000-09-01 2001-08-30 Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for manufacturing and use
US10/828,153 Expired - Lifetime US7399640B2 (en) 2000-09-01 2004-04-20 Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for use

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/828,153 Expired - Lifetime US7399640B2 (en) 2000-09-01 2004-04-20 Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for use

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (2) US20020045270A1 (en)
DE (1) DE10043042C2 (en)
GB (1) GB2370114B (en)

Cited By (42)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1442789A1 (en) * 2003-01-31 2004-08-04 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Multiple arrays
US20040200509A1 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-10-14 Stephen Felder Methods of and apparatus for washing high-density microplates
US20040219531A1 (en) * 2003-04-30 2004-11-04 Dicesare Joseph L. Method of scanning a sample plate surface mask in an area adjacent to a conductive area using matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry
WO2004100208A2 (en) * 2003-04-30 2004-11-18 Perkinelmer Life And Analytical Sciences Sample plate for matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry
US20040228772A1 (en) * 2003-05-13 2004-11-18 Becton, Dickinson And Company Method and apparatus for processing biological and chemical samples
US20040241396A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method of modifying a surface of a substrate and articles therefrom
JP2004340971A (en) * 2003-05-13 2004-12-02 Becton Dickinson & Co Method and device for purifying and desalting biological sample
US20040241395A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method of modifying a surface of a substrate and articles therefrom
US20040241323A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method for applying adhesive to a substrate
US20040241451A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method for modifying the surface of a substrate
US6844545B1 (en) * 2003-10-10 2005-01-18 Perseptive Biosystems, Inc. MALDI plate with removable insert
US20050058840A1 (en) * 2003-08-08 2005-03-17 Seiko Epson Corporation Bank forming method, wiring pattern forming method, electro-optical device, and electronic apparatus
WO2005061111A2 (en) * 2003-12-19 2005-07-07 Applera Corporation Maldi plate construction with grid
US20050242039A1 (en) * 2002-10-21 2005-11-03 Waters Investments Limited Deposition of dissolved analyte to hydrophobic surfaces by desolvation of organic solvents
US20060016984A1 (en) * 2003-02-10 2006-01-26 Waters Investments Limited Sample preparation plate for mass spectrometry
US20060183261A1 (en) * 2005-02-15 2006-08-17 Dudenhoefer Christie L Method of forming a biological sensor
WO2006119858A1 (en) * 2005-05-12 2006-11-16 Qiagen Gmbh Bio-sample carrier for mass spectrometric analyses
US20060266941A1 (en) * 2005-05-26 2006-11-30 Vestal Marvin L Method and apparatus for interfacing separations techniques to MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry
US20070047388A1 (en) * 2005-08-25 2007-03-01 Rockwell Scientific Licensing, Llc Fluidic mixing structure, method for fabricating same, and mixing method
WO2007133714A2 (en) * 2006-05-12 2007-11-22 Stratos Biosystems, Llc Analyte focusing biochips for affinity mass spectrometry
US7332347B2 (en) 2003-04-14 2008-02-19 Liang Li Apparatus and method for concentrating and collecting analytes from a flowing liquid stream
US20090215192A1 (en) * 2004-05-27 2009-08-27 Stratos Biosystems, Llc Solid-phase affinity-based method for preparing and manipulating an analyte-containing solution
WO2011097677A1 (en) * 2010-02-12 2011-08-18 Monash University Printed multi-zone microzone plates
WO2013137726A3 (en) * 2012-03-13 2013-12-05 Universiteit Leiden Method and device for solvent evaporation from a liquid feed
WO2014017018A1 (en) * 2012-07-24 2014-01-30 パナソニック株式会社 Analytical device
JP2014512538A (en) * 2011-04-19 2014-05-22 ポーレックス コーポレイション Card for sample storage and delivery containing sintered porous plastic
US20160032281A1 (en) * 2014-07-31 2016-02-04 Fei Company Functionalized grids for locating and imaging biological specimens and methods of using the same
WO2016163385A1 (en) * 2015-04-06 2016-10-13 国立大学法人名古屋大学 Laser microdissection apparatus, analyzing apparatus including laser microdissection apparatus, sample collecting method, and device employed in laser microdissection apparatus
US9625427B2 (en) 2012-03-13 2017-04-18 Universiteit Leiden Method and device for solvent evaporation from a liquid feed
JP2017181333A (en) * 2016-03-31 2017-10-05 シチズンファインデバイス株式会社 Sample mounting plate and manufacturing method therefor
JP2018036257A (en) * 2016-08-25 2018-03-08 株式会社東レリサーチセンター Manufacturing method of sample base for microspectroscopy
JP2018173324A (en) * 2017-03-31 2018-11-08 シチズンファインデバイス株式会社 Method for manufacturing sample loading plate
US10227583B2 (en) 2016-12-12 2019-03-12 xCella Biosciences, Inc. Methods and systems for screening using microcapillary arrays
US10350595B2 (en) 2016-11-14 2019-07-16 Orca Biosystems, Inc. Methods and apparatuses for sorting target particles
US10370653B2 (en) 2015-02-22 2019-08-06 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Micro-screening apparatus, process, and products
EP3418731A4 (en) * 2016-03-18 2019-11-13 Citizen Finedevice Co., Ltd. Sample loading plate and method for manufacturing same
US10788506B2 (en) 2012-07-03 2020-09-29 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Scalable bio-element analysis
US11017993B2 (en) 2017-03-16 2021-05-25 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Separation of liquid in droplets and sedimented material enclosed therein
US11156626B2 (en) 2016-12-30 2021-10-26 xCella Biosciences, Inc. Multi-stage sample recovery system
CN113814014A (en) * 2021-09-23 2021-12-21 北京京东方技术开发有限公司 Digital polymerase chain reaction microfluidic device and preparation method thereof
US11307122B2 (en) 2017-05-15 2022-04-19 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Preparation of biological cells on mass spectrometric sample supports for desorbing ionization
US11473081B2 (en) 2016-12-12 2022-10-18 xCella Biosciences, Inc. Methods and systems for screening using microcapillary arrays

Families Citing this family (37)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2002096541A1 (en) 2001-05-25 2002-12-05 Waters Investments Limited Desalting plate for maldi mass spectrometry
GB0120131D0 (en) 2001-08-17 2001-10-10 Micromass Ltd Maldi target plate
WO2003071274A1 (en) * 2002-02-22 2003-08-28 Sunyx Surface Nanotechnologies Gmbh Use of ultraphobic surfaces having a multitude of hydrophilic areas for analyzing samples
AU2003215590A1 (en) * 2002-02-22 2003-09-09 Scienion Ag Ultraphobic sample carrier having functional hydrophilic and/or oleophilic areas
DE10207616A1 (en) * 2002-02-22 2003-09-04 Sunyx Surface Nanotechnologies Planar structure comprises ultraphobic surface and hydrophilic or oleophilic regions having an additional functionality, useful as a carrier for e.g. binding agents
EP1478926A1 (en) * 2002-02-22 2004-11-24 Sunyx Surface Nanotechnologies GmbH Ultraphobic surface having a multitude of reversibly producible hydrophilic and/or oleophilic areas
DE10258674A1 (en) * 2002-12-13 2004-06-24 Sunyx Surface Nanotechnologies Gmbh Manufacturing sample carrier with points for matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization, forms MALDI matrix points by gas phase sublimation
US6822230B2 (en) 2002-12-23 2004-11-23 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization sample holders and methods of using the same
AU2003304421B2 (en) * 2003-07-14 2009-12-03 Qiagen Sciences, Inc. Sample presentation device with differing wettability
US20050164402A1 (en) * 2003-07-14 2005-07-28 Belisle Christopher M. Sample presentation device
JP4522739B2 (en) * 2004-03-31 2010-08-11 株式会社堀場製作所 Concentration method of liquid sample, holding table for concentration, and trace element analysis method using the same
AT500618B1 (en) * 2004-04-02 2006-02-15 Physikalisches Buero Steinmuel TARGET FOR MALDI / SELDI-MS
AT502134B1 (en) * 2004-04-02 2007-06-15 Physikalisches Buero Steinmuel TARGET FOR MALDI / SELDI-MS
DE102004019043B4 (en) * 2004-04-16 2008-08-21 Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen Preparation method for the micro-area analysis of the composition of substance mixtures
DE102004058555A1 (en) * 2004-12-03 2006-06-08 Qiagen Gmbh Method of concentrating biomolecules near the surface of a crystalline structure
DE102005022823A1 (en) * 2005-05-02 2006-11-09 Qiagen Gmbh Sample carrier with an ultraphobic surface, useful for isolating and analyzing biomolecules, has an affinity zone and a waste zone and/or a zone covered with a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization matrix
WO2008063135A1 (en) 2006-11-24 2008-05-29 Agency For Science, Technology And Research Apparatus for processing a sample in a liquid droplet and method of using the same
WO2010120249A1 (en) 2009-04-17 2010-10-21 Curiox Biosystems Pte Ltd Use of chemically patterned substrate for liquid handling, chemical and biological reactions
US9874501B2 (en) 2006-11-24 2018-01-23 Curiox Biosystems Pte Ltd. Use of chemically patterned substrate for liquid handling, chemical and biological reactions
US7564028B2 (en) 2007-05-01 2009-07-21 Virgin Instruments Corporation Vacuum housing system for MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry
US7564026B2 (en) 2007-05-01 2009-07-21 Virgin Instruments Corporation Linear TOF geometry for high sensitivity at high mass
US7838824B2 (en) 2007-05-01 2010-11-23 Virgin Instruments Corporation TOF-TOF with high resolution precursor selection and multiplexed MS-MS
US7663100B2 (en) 2007-05-01 2010-02-16 Virgin Instruments Corporation Reversed geometry MALDI TOF
US7589319B2 (en) 2007-05-01 2009-09-15 Virgin Instruments Corporation Reflector TOF with high resolution and mass accuracy for peptides and small molecules
US7667195B2 (en) 2007-05-01 2010-02-23 Virgin Instruments Corporation High performance low cost MALDI MS-MS
GB2452239B (en) * 2007-06-01 2012-08-29 Kratos Analytical Ltd Method and apparatus useful for imaging
GB0712795D0 (en) * 2007-07-02 2007-08-08 Ecole Polytechnique Federale De Solid phase extraction and ionization device
US10725020B2 (en) 2007-11-14 2020-07-28 Curiox Biosystems Pte Ltd. High throughput miniaturized assay system and methods
WO2013114217A1 (en) 2012-02-05 2013-08-08 Curiox Biosystems Pte Ltd. Array plates and methods for making and using same
US7888127B2 (en) 2008-01-15 2011-02-15 Sequenom, Inc. Methods for reducing adduct formation for mass spectrometry analysis
US9878328B2 (en) 2010-07-23 2018-01-30 Curiox Biosystems Pte Ltd. Apparatus and method for multiple reactions in small volumes
US9305756B2 (en) 2013-03-13 2016-04-05 Agena Bioscience, Inc. Preparation enhancements and methods of use for MALDI mass spectrometry
US10800895B2 (en) 2013-04-16 2020-10-13 STRATEC CONSUMABLES GmbH Polymer slides having hydrophobic small molecules
US9557318B2 (en) 2013-07-09 2017-01-31 Curiox Biosystems Pte Ltd. Array plates for washing samples
US10545139B2 (en) 2015-06-16 2020-01-28 Curiox Biosystems Pte Ltd. Methods and devices for performing biological assays using magnetic components
KR102446247B1 (en) 2017-04-05 2022-09-21 큐리옥스 바이오시스템즈 피티이 엘티디. Methods, devices and apparatus for cleaning samples on array plates
DE102019101389B4 (en) 2019-01-21 2020-08-06 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Process for sample preparation on a spectrometric sample carrier

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5644014A (en) * 1991-06-03 1997-07-01 Institut Fur Neue Materialien Gemeinnutzige Gmbh Coating compositions based on fluorine-containing inorganic polycondensates, their production and their use
US5719060A (en) * 1993-05-28 1998-02-17 Baylor College Of Medicine Method and apparatus for desorption and ionization of analytes
US5831184A (en) * 1995-09-22 1998-11-03 U.S. Philips Corporation Sample holder for a sample to be subjected to radiation analysis
US5958345A (en) * 1997-03-14 1999-09-28 Moxtek, Inc. Thin film sample support
US6287872B1 (en) * 1997-12-11 2001-09-11 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Sample support plates for Maldi mass spectrometry including methods for manufacture of plates and application of sample
US20030106997A1 (en) * 1999-04-29 2003-06-12 Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc. Probes with hydrophobic coatings for gas phase ion spectrometers

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6020208A (en) * 1994-05-27 2000-02-01 Baylor College Of Medicine Systems for surface-enhanced affinity capture for desorption and detection of analytes
DE69824586T2 (en) * 1997-06-26 2005-06-23 PerSeptive Biosystems, Inc., Framingham SAMPLE HIGH DENSITY SAMPLE FOR THE ANALYSIS OF BIOLOGICAL SAMPLES
DE19923761C1 (en) * 1999-05-21 2001-02-08 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Processing of sample molecules of liquids, involves making the sample droplets stand or suspend from lyophilic or lyophobic anchors on flat support surfaces

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5644014A (en) * 1991-06-03 1997-07-01 Institut Fur Neue Materialien Gemeinnutzige Gmbh Coating compositions based on fluorine-containing inorganic polycondensates, their production and their use
US5719060A (en) * 1993-05-28 1998-02-17 Baylor College Of Medicine Method and apparatus for desorption and ionization of analytes
US5831184A (en) * 1995-09-22 1998-11-03 U.S. Philips Corporation Sample holder for a sample to be subjected to radiation analysis
US5958345A (en) * 1997-03-14 1999-09-28 Moxtek, Inc. Thin film sample support
US6287872B1 (en) * 1997-12-11 2001-09-11 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Sample support plates for Maldi mass spectrometry including methods for manufacture of plates and application of sample
US20030106997A1 (en) * 1999-04-29 2003-06-12 Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc. Probes with hydrophobic coatings for gas phase ion spectrometers

Cited By (74)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20050242039A1 (en) * 2002-10-21 2005-11-03 Waters Investments Limited Deposition of dissolved analyte to hydrophobic surfaces by desolvation of organic solvents
US20040152083A1 (en) * 2003-01-31 2004-08-05 Leproust Eric M. Multiple arrays with surface energy transition to maintain separation of samples on the arrays
EP1442789A1 (en) * 2003-01-31 2004-08-04 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Multiple arrays
GB2413892B (en) * 2003-02-10 2007-01-31 Waters Investments Ltd A sample preparation plate for mass spectrometry
US20060016984A1 (en) * 2003-02-10 2006-01-26 Waters Investments Limited Sample preparation plate for mass spectrometry
WO2004091819A2 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-10-28 Neogen, Llc. Methods of an apparatus for washing high-density microplates
US7516749B2 (en) 2003-04-08 2009-04-14 Neogen, Llc Methods of and apparatus for washing high-density microplates
US20040200509A1 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-10-14 Stephen Felder Methods of and apparatus for washing high-density microplates
WO2004091819A3 (en) * 2003-04-08 2004-12-02 Neogen Llc Methods of an apparatus for washing high-density microplates
US7332347B2 (en) 2003-04-14 2008-02-19 Liang Li Apparatus and method for concentrating and collecting analytes from a flowing liquid stream
US20040219531A1 (en) * 2003-04-30 2004-11-04 Dicesare Joseph L. Method of scanning a sample plate surface mask in an area adjacent to a conductive area using matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry
WO2004100208A2 (en) * 2003-04-30 2004-11-18 Perkinelmer Life And Analytical Sciences Sample plate for matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry
WO2004100208A3 (en) * 2003-04-30 2005-12-29 Perkinelmer Life & Analytical Sciences Sample plate for matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry
US20110056311A1 (en) * 2003-04-30 2011-03-10 Dicesare Joseph L Method of Scanning a Sample Plate Surface Mask in an Area Adjacent to a Conductive Area Using Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption and Ionization Mass Spectrometry
US7858387B2 (en) * 2003-04-30 2010-12-28 Perkinelmer Health Sciences, Inc. Method of scanning a sample plate surface mask in an area adjacent to a conductive area using matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry
US20040228772A1 (en) * 2003-05-13 2004-11-18 Becton, Dickinson And Company Method and apparatus for processing biological and chemical samples
JP4575708B2 (en) * 2003-05-13 2010-11-04 ベクトン・ディキンソン・アンド・カンパニー Method and apparatus for purifying and desalting biological samples
JP2004340971A (en) * 2003-05-13 2004-12-02 Becton Dickinson & Co Method and device for purifying and desalting biological sample
US20090023897A1 (en) * 2003-05-13 2009-01-22 Becton Dickinson And Company Method and apparatus for purifying and desalting biological samples
EP1972919A1 (en) * 2003-05-13 2008-09-24 Becton, Dickinson and Company Method and apparatus for processing biological and chemical samples
US6969166B2 (en) 2003-05-29 2005-11-29 3M Innovative Properties Company Method for modifying the surface of a substrate
US20040241451A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method for modifying the surface of a substrate
US20040241323A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method for applying adhesive to a substrate
US20040241395A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method of modifying a surface of a substrate and articles therefrom
US20040241396A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2004-12-02 3M Innovative Properties Company Method of modifying a surface of a substrate and articles therefrom
US7732003B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2010-06-08 Seiko Epson Corporation Bank forming method, wiring pattern forming method, electro-optical device, and electronic apparatus
US20050058840A1 (en) * 2003-08-08 2005-03-17 Seiko Epson Corporation Bank forming method, wiring pattern forming method, electro-optical device, and electronic apparatus
US6844545B1 (en) * 2003-10-10 2005-01-18 Perseptive Biosystems, Inc. MALDI plate with removable insert
WO2005061111A2 (en) * 2003-12-19 2005-07-07 Applera Corporation Maldi plate construction with grid
WO2005061111A3 (en) * 2003-12-19 2006-06-29 Applera Corp Maldi plate construction with grid
US20090215192A1 (en) * 2004-05-27 2009-08-27 Stratos Biosystems, Llc Solid-phase affinity-based method for preparing and manipulating an analyte-containing solution
US20060183261A1 (en) * 2005-02-15 2006-08-17 Dudenhoefer Christie L Method of forming a biological sensor
WO2006119858A1 (en) * 2005-05-12 2006-11-16 Qiagen Gmbh Bio-sample carrier for mass spectrometric analyses
US20060266941A1 (en) * 2005-05-26 2006-11-30 Vestal Marvin L Method and apparatus for interfacing separations techniques to MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry
WO2006127890A3 (en) * 2005-05-26 2008-07-10 Virgin Instr Corp Method and apparatus for interfacing separations techniques to maldi-tof mass spectrometry
WO2006127890A2 (en) * 2005-05-26 2006-11-30 Virgin Instruments Corporation Method and apparatus for interfacing separations techniques to maldi-tof mass spectrometry
US20070047388A1 (en) * 2005-08-25 2007-03-01 Rockwell Scientific Licensing, Llc Fluidic mixing structure, method for fabricating same, and mixing method
US20090163380A1 (en) * 2006-05-12 2009-06-25 Stratos Biosystems, Llc Analyte focusing biochips for affinity mass spectrometry
WO2007133714A3 (en) * 2006-05-12 2008-01-10 Stratos Biosystems Llc Analyte focusing biochips for affinity mass spectrometry
WO2007133714A2 (en) * 2006-05-12 2007-11-22 Stratos Biosystems, Llc Analyte focusing biochips for affinity mass spectrometry
WO2011097677A1 (en) * 2010-02-12 2011-08-18 Monash University Printed multi-zone microzone plates
US9101311B2 (en) 2011-04-19 2015-08-11 Porex Corporation Cards for sample storage and delivery comprising sintered porous plastic
JP2014512538A (en) * 2011-04-19 2014-05-22 ポーレックス コーポレイション Card for sample storage and delivery containing sintered porous plastic
US9198609B2 (en) 2011-04-19 2015-12-01 Porex Corporation Cards for sample storage and delivery comprising sintered porous plastic
US9625427B2 (en) 2012-03-13 2017-04-18 Universiteit Leiden Method and device for solvent evaporation from a liquid feed
EP4177589A1 (en) * 2012-03-13 2023-05-10 Universiteit Leiden Method and device for solvent evaporation from a liquid feed
WO2013137726A3 (en) * 2012-03-13 2013-12-05 Universiteit Leiden Method and device for solvent evaporation from a liquid feed
US10788506B2 (en) 2012-07-03 2020-09-29 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Scalable bio-element analysis
US9145579B2 (en) 2012-07-24 2015-09-29 Panasonic Healthcare Co., Ltd. Analyzing device
EP2878951A4 (en) * 2012-07-24 2015-07-22 Panasonic Healthcare Co Ltd Analytical device
JP5705329B2 (en) * 2012-07-24 2015-04-22 パナソニックヘルスケアホールディングス株式会社 Analytical device
JPWO2014017018A1 (en) * 2012-07-24 2016-07-07 パナソニックヘルスケアホールディングス株式会社 Analytical device
CN103890591A (en) * 2012-07-24 2014-06-25 松下电器产业株式会社 Analytical device
WO2014017018A1 (en) * 2012-07-24 2014-01-30 パナソニック株式会社 Analytical device
US20160032281A1 (en) * 2014-07-31 2016-02-04 Fei Company Functionalized grids for locating and imaging biological specimens and methods of using the same
US10370653B2 (en) 2015-02-22 2019-08-06 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Micro-screening apparatus, process, and products
US10526600B2 (en) 2015-02-22 2020-01-07 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Micro-screening apparatus, process, and products
JPWO2016163385A1 (en) * 2015-04-06 2018-02-22 国立大学法人名古屋大学 Laser microdissection apparatus, analysis apparatus including laser microdissection apparatus, sampling method, and device used for laser microdissection apparatus
WO2016163385A1 (en) * 2015-04-06 2016-10-13 国立大学法人名古屋大学 Laser microdissection apparatus, analyzing apparatus including laser microdissection apparatus, sample collecting method, and device employed in laser microdissection apparatus
US10796892B2 (en) 2016-03-18 2020-10-06 Citizen Finedevice Co., Ltd. Sample mounting plate and method for manufacturing the same
EP3418731A4 (en) * 2016-03-18 2019-11-13 Citizen Finedevice Co., Ltd. Sample loading plate and method for manufacturing same
JP2017181333A (en) * 2016-03-31 2017-10-05 シチズンファインデバイス株式会社 Sample mounting plate and manufacturing method therefor
JP2018036257A (en) * 2016-08-25 2018-03-08 株式会社東レリサーチセンター Manufacturing method of sample base for microspectroscopy
US10722885B2 (en) 2016-11-14 2020-07-28 Orca Biosystems, Inc. Methods and apparatuses for sorting target particles
US10350595B2 (en) 2016-11-14 2019-07-16 Orca Biosystems, Inc. Methods and apparatuses for sorting target particles
US11471885B2 (en) 2016-11-14 2022-10-18 Orca Biosystems, Inc. Methods and apparatuses for sorting target particles
US10227583B2 (en) 2016-12-12 2019-03-12 xCella Biosciences, Inc. Methods and systems for screening using microcapillary arrays
US11085039B2 (en) 2016-12-12 2021-08-10 xCella Biosciences, Inc. Methods and systems for screening using microcapillary arrays
US11473081B2 (en) 2016-12-12 2022-10-18 xCella Biosciences, Inc. Methods and systems for screening using microcapillary arrays
US11156626B2 (en) 2016-12-30 2021-10-26 xCella Biosciences, Inc. Multi-stage sample recovery system
US11017993B2 (en) 2017-03-16 2021-05-25 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Separation of liquid in droplets and sedimented material enclosed therein
JP2018173324A (en) * 2017-03-31 2018-11-08 シチズンファインデバイス株式会社 Method for manufacturing sample loading plate
US11307122B2 (en) 2017-05-15 2022-04-19 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Preparation of biological cells on mass spectrometric sample supports for desorbing ionization
CN113814014A (en) * 2021-09-23 2021-12-21 北京京东方技术开发有限公司 Digital polymerase chain reaction microfluidic device and preparation method thereof

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB0121196D0 (en) 2001-10-24
US20040197921A1 (en) 2004-10-07
GB2370114A (en) 2002-06-19
GB2370114B (en) 2004-03-31
US7399640B2 (en) 2008-07-15
DE10043042C2 (en) 2003-04-17
DE10043042A1 (en) 2002-03-21

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7399640B2 (en) Structured biosample support plates for mass spectroscopic analyses and procedures for use
US6287872B1 (en) Sample support plates for Maldi mass spectrometry including methods for manufacture of plates and application of sample
US7888637B2 (en) Sample preparation plate for mass spectrometry
JP4443300B2 (en) Biological or chemical sample processing method and apparatus
US20060252047A1 (en) Device and method for analysis of samples using a combined sample treatment and sample carrier device
WO2007136386A2 (en) Droplet-based on-chip sample preparation for mass spectrometry
US20200360918A1 (en) Multipin solid phase microextraction device
US20090023897A1 (en) Method and apparatus for purifying and desalting biological samples
US20050031496A1 (en) Target plate for mass spectometers and use thereof
US20050047962A1 (en) Ffe array dispenser
JP2005513472A (en) Analyzer and analysis method
US20060263259A1 (en) Apparatus and method for sample preparation and direct spotting eluants onto a MALDI-TOF target
EP1151793B1 (en) Processing proteins from gels for analysis using mass spectrometry

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: BRUKER DALTONIK GMBH, GERMANY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:SCHURENBERG, MARTIN;FRANZEN, JOCHEN;REEL/FRAME:012424/0985

Effective date: 20011019

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION