Genetic Archaeology
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to GeneticArchaeology.com RSS Fee Subscribe

Scientists invent 'lab on a chip' to automate whole-animal genetic and drug screens (8/22/2007)

Tags:
sequencers, sequencing

This photo shows an immobilized C. elegans worm inside the new microfluidic chip designed at MIT. The green spots are neurons. - Image Credit: Mehmet Fatih Yanik, MIT
This photo shows an immobilized C. elegans worm inside the new microfluidic chip designed at MIT. The green spots are neurons. - Image Credit: Mehmet Fatih Yanik, MIT
Genetic studies on whole animals can now be done dramatically faster using a new microchip developed by engineers at MIT.

The new "lab on a chip" can automatically treat, sort and image small animals like the 1-millimeter C. elegans worm, accelerating research and eliminating human error, said Mehmet Yanik, MIT assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science.

Yanik and his colleagues described their device in the advance online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of Aug. 20. "Lab on a chip" technologies are being developed to sort and image individual cells, but this is the first device that can be used to study whole animals.

C. elegans is often used in studies designed to identify which genes control which phenotypes, or traits. Researchers traditionally do this by treating them with a mutagen, or by using RNA interference, in which expression of a certain gene is blocked with a small strand of RNA. Such studies normally take months or years to complete. The new chip, which sorts and images worms in milliseconds, dramatically speeds up that process.

"Normally you would treat the animals with the chemicals, look at them under the microscope, one at a time, and then transfer them," Yanik said. "With this chip, we can completely automate that process."

The tiny worms are flowed inside the chip, immobilized by suction and imaged with a high resolution microscope. Once the phenotype is identified, the animals are routed to the appropriate section of the chip for further screening.

The worms can be treated with mutagen, RNAi or drugs before they enter the chip, or they can be treated directly on the chip, using a new, efficient delivery system that loads chemicals from the wells of a microplate into the chip.

"Our technique allows you to transfer the animals into the chip and treat each one with a different gene silencer or a different drug," Yanik said.

Yanik and his colleagues plan to use the chips to continue their research on neural degeneration and regeneration in C. elegans. Yanik and his collaborators had previously demonstrated a high precision femtosecond laser technology to cut axons in living animals and then observe which genes are involved in axon regeneration.

The lead author of the paper is Chris Rohde, a graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science (EECS). Other authors of the paper are Matthew Angel, a graduate student in EECS, Fei Zeng, a postdoctoral fellow in the Research Laboratory of Electronics, and Ricardo Gonzalez-Rubio, a graduate student in biological engineering.

The research was funded by MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics and by the Canadian National Science and Engineering Research Council and the Paul and Daisy Soros Foundation.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by MIT

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Genome of simplest animal reveals ancient lineage, confounding array of complex capabilities 8/25/2008

Genetics reveals big fish that almost got away 8/24/2008

Exploding chromosomes fuel research about evolution of genetic storage 8/23/2008

Tahitian vanilla originated in Maya forests, says botanist 8/22/2008

Research touches a nerve 8/21/2008

Molecular sleuths track evolution through the ribosome 8/20/2008

Nine To Twenty Individual Fire Ant Queens Started U.S. Fire Ant Population 8/17/2008

How DNA Repairs Can Reshape Genome, Spawn New Species 8/15/2008

Study reveals surprising details of the evolution of protein translation 8/13/2008

Study Helps Pinpoint Genetic Variations in European Americans 8/10/2008

A gene for sexual switching in melons provides clues to the evolution of sex 8/9/2008

Complete Neandertal mitochondrial genome sequenced from 38,000-year-old bone 8/8/2008

Study uses genetic evidence to trace ancient African migration 8/5/2008

Fangs for the memories: new study reveals evolution of snake fangs and venom 8/1/2008

'Chicken and chips' theory of Pacific migration 7/30/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.