|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Products - Microarray Substrates & Slides - Mirror
Table of Contents
Introduction Quality Control Product Description Users will appreciate the following:
Glass Specifications
Technical Assistance
Short Protocol (MirrorClean) Short Protocol (MirrorAmine) Short Protocol (MirrorAldehyde) Short Protocol (MirrorEpoxy) Complete Protocol (MirrorClean) 2. (Optional) Transport the decontaminated product into the cleanroom. This step is optional and only required for users who fabricate microarrays in a cleanroom environment. Carry the de-contaminated MirrorClean Microarray Substrates in the sealed plastic shipping envelope into the cleanroom changing area. Change into cleanroom attire and enter the cleanroom facility. 3. Remove and discard silver antistatic bag. Remove the antistatic packaging envelope and discard it into an appropriate waste receptacle. 4. Open box containing 25 MirrorClean Microarray Substrates (MRC or MRCBC). Use the white cleanroom wipe inside the substrate box to gently lift the cover upward. Do not attempt to open the substrate box upside down, as this will cause the Substrates to empty into the lid of the box and may damage or break the glass. Avoid dragging the cleanroom wipe across the substrates as this may cause fraying of the wipe and particle generation. 5. Modify MirrorClean Substrates with a surface chemistry or surface coating. Surface chemistries may include the use of organosilanes or coatings such as poly-lysine, gels, gel pads and other materials. If only one of the two sides of the Substrate is modified, the recommended convention places the corner chamfer (i.e. cropped corner) at the upper right if the Substrate is held with the long dimension facing up and down (see Figure 7). After the surface chemistry or coating is applied, remove access or unbound material from the Substrate. After surface modification, the Substrates can be barcoded for identification purposes (see Figure 7). 6. Print microarrays using Stealth contact printing technology or another printing technology onto the modified MirrorClean Microarray Substrates. The SpotBot® 2 Personal Microarrayer works well for many applications. Many different pin tips and uptake channels are available, allowing the user to select different spot diameters and loading volumes. For best results use Micro Spotting Solution Plus printing buffer. The printing convention places the corner chamfer at the upper right side if the Substrate is held with the long dimension facing up and down (see Figure 7). Spot number one would therefore be located at the upper left corner on the side opposite the corner chamfer (Fig. 7). A barcode could then be placed on the lower end of the Substrate, preferably facing upward (Fig. 7). Process the Substrates to remove unbound material and react with a labeled sample. Complete Protocol (MirrorAmine) 2. (Optional) Transport the decontaminated product into the cleanroom. This step is optional and only required for users who fabricate microarrays in a cleanroom environment. Carry the de-contaminated MirrorAmine Microarray Substrates in the sealed plastic shipping envelope into the cleanroom changing area. Change into cleanroom attire and enter the cleanroom facility. 3. Remove and discard silver antistatic bag. Remove the antistatic packaging envelope and discard it into an appropriate waste receptacle. 4. Open box containing 25 MirrorAmine Microarray Substrates (MRM or MRMBC). Use the white cleanroom wipe inside the substrate box to gently lift the cover upward. Do not attempt to open the substrate box upside down, as this will cause the Substrates to empty into the lid of the box and may damage or break the glass. Avoid dragging the cleanroom wipe across the substrates as this may cause fraying of the wipe and particle generation. 5. Print microarrays using Stealth contact printing technology. Print the microarrays using either Micro Spotting Pins or some other contact or non-contact printing technology. The SpotBot® 2 Personal Microarrayer works well for many applications. For best results use Micro Spotting Solution Plus printing buffer. Load the MirrorAmine Microarray Substrates onto the printing surface of a microarraying device, with the corner chamfer located at the upper right corner as shown in Figure 7. Because the highly reflective mirror coating is attached to the backside of the substrate, DO NOT attempt to print on the backside of the Substrate. The printing convention places spot number one in the upper left corner opposite the corner chamfer (see Figure 7). Print the microarrays until all of the samples have been deposited. The maximum recommended printing area is 20 mm x 72 mm, unless barcodes are used and then the printing area will be smaller. 6. Process the printed microarrays. Chemically couple the biomolecules to the MirrorAmine surface and process the printed microarrays to remove unbound material. Optimal protocols for DNA, proteins, small molecules, extracts, cells and other molecules have been developed. One protocol that works well for double-stranded nucleic acids is as follows: (1) re-suspend the double-stranded DNAs in Micro Spotting Solution Plus, (2) print the DNAs onto MirrorAmine Substrates with Stealth Micro Spotting Technology, (3) bake the printed substrates for 80 minutes at 80°C in a drying oven without vacuum, (4) rinse the printed substrates twice in 0.1% SDS and once in dH2O for 2 min each wash at room temperature (22-25°C) to remove unbound DNA, (5) denature the double-stranded DNA on the surface by immersing the substrates in boiling dH20 (100°C) for 3 min, (7) plunge the substrates into ice cold 100% ethanol for 30 sec to fix the denatured DNA, and (8) dry the processed Substrates by centrifugation for 10 sec in a Microarray High Speed Centrifuge or for 1 min at 500 x g in a tabletop centrifuge (e.g Savant). 7. React microarrays with labeled probes. React the processed microarrays with labeled probe mixtures. Probes can be complex mixtures of labeled or fluorescent nucleic acids, proteins, antibodies, extracts and other substances. Microarray reactions can be performed under glass cover slips at a volume of 2.0 µl per cm2 of cover slip. Pre-heating the probe to 42-65°C just prior to hybridization can greatly reduce background!! UniHyb Hybridization Solution, HybIt Hybridization Solution, and HybIt Hybridization Solution work well at a wide range of temperatures and reduce background hybridization is many cases. These buffers can also be used for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis. Buffers consisting of 5X SSC or 6X SSPE and 0.1% SDS can also be used. The addition of 0.2 mg/ml BSA (Worthington) to the hybridization reaction can reduce background. Hybridization Cassettes provide a convenient reaction environment for all types of reactions. Following the microarray reaction, unbound probe material is removed by several successive washes in dilute buffers at room temperature (~25°C). Wash buffers should be adjusted when trying to detect short duplexes or SNPs. 8. Detect microarray signals using fluorescence detection device. Suitable detection systems accommodate the 25 mm x 76 mm (1" x 3") substrate and have pixel resolutions from 3-50 µm. Recommended scanning and imaging resolution is ~1/10 spot diameter. High quality scanners and images are available from PerkinElmer, Bio-Rad, Axon, Amersham, Applied Precision, Agilent, and others. Signal-to-noise (SNR) ratios should be 2-10 fold greater than with traditional, non-reflective glass substrates. 9. Analyze and model data. Microarray images should be saved as 16-bit Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) files for ease of quantitation and modeling. Quantitation templates can be superimposed over TIFF images for automated quantitation. Data can be normalized and transformed for greater statistical soundness when comparing multiple channels or microarrays. Scatter plots, principle component analysis (PCA), cluster analysis, self organizing maps (SOMs), expression maps and various supervised methods are among the approaches that can be used for analysis and modeling. High quality tools are available from Applied Maths, Applied Precision, Array Genetics, BioDiscovery, Compugen, Imaging Research Inc., Iobion Informatics, Lion bioscience AG, MediaCybernetics, MiraiBio Inc., PerkinElmer, PREMIER Biosoft, Rosetta Inpharmatics, Silicon Genetics, VisX Labs, and others.
Complete Protocol (MirrorAldehyde) 2. (Optional) Transport the decontaminated product into the cleanroom. This step is optional and only required for users who fabricate microarrays in a cleanroom environment. Carry the de-contaminated MirrorAldehyde Microarray Substrates in the sealed plastic shipping envelope into the cleanroom changing area. Change into cleanroom attire and enter the cleanroom facility. 3. Remove and discard silver antistatic bag. Remove the antistatic packaging envelope and discard it into an appropriate waste receptacle. 4. Open box containing 25 MirrorAldehyde Microarray Substrates (MRA or MRABC). Use the white cleanroom wipe inside the substrate box to gently lift the cover upward. Do not attempt to open the substrate box upside down, as this will cause the Substrates to empty into the lid of the box and may damage or break the glass. Avoid dragging the cleanroom wipe across the substrates as this may cause fraying of the wipe and particle generation. 5. Print microarrays using Stealth contact printing technology. Print the microarrays using either Micro Spotting Pins or some other contact or non-contact printing technology. The SpotBot® 2 Personal Microarrayer works well for many applications. For best results use Micro Spotting Solution Plus printing buffer. Load the MirrorAldehyde Microarray Substrates onto the printing surface of a microarraying device, with the corner chamfer located at the upper right corner as shown in Figure 7. Because the highly reflective mirror coating is attached to the backside of the substrate, DO NOT attempt to print on the backside of the Substrate. The printing convention places spot number one in the upper left corner opposite the corner chamfer (see Figure 7). Print the microarrays until all of the samples have been deposited. The maximum recommended printing area is 20 mm x 72 mm, unless barcodes are used and then the printing area will be smaller. 6. Process the printed microarrays. Chemically couple the biomolecules to the MirrorAldehyde surface and process the printed microarrays to remove unbound material. Optimal protocols for DNA, proteins, small molecules, extracts, cells and other molecules have been developed. One protocol that works well for printing and attaching single- and double-stranded nucleic acids to the MirrorAldehyde surface uses DNA modified with primary amines that form Schiff base covalent bonds with reactive aldehydes on the Substrate surface: (1) attach a C6 or C12 amino modification (Glen Research) to the 5' end of each oligonucleotide; amino modifications can be added to double stranded DNAs by PCR with primers that contain amino modifications, (2) re-suspend the amino-linked DNAs in 1X Micro Spotting Solution Plus, (3) print the amino-linked DNAs onto MirrorAldehyde Substrates with Stealth Micro Spotting Technology, (4) allow the Substrates to dry for 12 hrs at room temperature (~25°C) at <30% relative humidity, (5) rinse the printed substrates twice in 0.1% SDS and once in dH2O for 2 min each wash at room temperature (22-25°C) to remove unbound DNA, (6) rinse the Substrates once in dH2O for 2 min at room temperature with vigorous agitation, (7) transfer the Substrates into boiling dH2O at 100°C for 3 min to denature the DNA (8) plunge the substrates into ice cold 100% ethanol for 30 sec to fix the denatured DNA, and (9) dry the processed Substrates by centrifugation for 10 sec in a Microarray High Speed Centrifuge or for 1 min at 500 x g in a tabletop centrifuge (e.g Savant). 7. React microarrays with labeled probes. React the processed microarrays with labeled probe mixtures. Probes can be complex mixtures of labeled or fluorescent nucleic acids, proteins, antibodies, extracts and other substances. Microarray reactions can be performed under glass cover slips at a volume of 2.0 µl per cm2 of cover slip. Pre-heating the probe to 42-65°C just prior to hybridization can greatly reduce background!! UniHyb Hybridization Solution, HybIt Hybridization Solution, and HybIt Hybridization Solution work well at a wide range of temperatures and reduce background hybridization is many cases. These buffers can also be used for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis. Buffers consisting of 5X SSC or 6X SSPE and 0.1% SDS can also be used. The addition of 0.2 mg/ml BSA (Worthington) to the hybridization reaction can reduce background. Hybridization Cassettes provide a convenient reaction environment for all types of reactions. Following the microarray reaction, unbound probe material is removed by several successive washes in dilute buffers at room temperature (~25°C). Wash buffers should be adjusted when trying to detect short duplexes or SNPs. 8. Detect microarray signals using fluorescence detection device. Suitable detection systems accommodate the 25 mm x 76 mm (1" x 3") substrate and have pixel resolutions from 3-50 µm. Recommended scanning and imaging resolution is ~1/10 spot diameter. High quality scanners and images are available from PerkinElmer, Bio-Rad, Axon, Amersham, Applied Precision, Agilent, and others. Signal-to-noise (SNR) ratios should be 2-10 fold greater than with traditional, non-reflective glass substrates. 9. Analyze and model data. Microarray images should be saved as 16-bit Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) files for ease of quantitation and modeling. Quantitation templates can be superimposed over TIFF images for automated quantitation. Data can be normalized and transformed for greater statistical soundness when comparing multiple channels or microarrays. Scatter plots, principle component analysis (PCA), cluster analysis, self organizing maps (SOMs), expression maps and various supervised methods are among the approaches that can be used for analysis and modeling. High quality tools are available from Applied Maths, Applied Precision, Array Genetics, BioDiscovery, Compugen, Imaging Research Inc., Iobion Informatics, Lion bioscience AG, MediaCybernetics, MiraiBio Inc., PerkinElmer, PREMIER Biosoft, Rosetta Inpharmatics, Silicon Genetics, VisX Labs, and others.
Complete Protocol (MirrorEpoxy) 2. (Optional) Transport the decontaminated product into the cleanroom. This step is optional and only required for users who fabricate microarrays in a cleanroom environment. Carry the de-contaminated MirrorEpoxy Microarray Substrates in the sealed plastic shipping envelope into the cleanroom changing area. Change into cleanroom attire and enter the cleanroom facility. 3. Remove and discard silver antistatic bag. Remove the antistatic packaging envelope and discard it into an appropriate waste receptacle. 4. Open box containing 25 MirrorEpoxy Microarray Substrates (MRE or MREBC). Use the white cleanroom wipe inside the substrate box to gently lift the cover upward. Do not attempt to open the substrate box upside down, as this will cause the Substrates to empty into the lid of the box and may damage or break the glass. Avoid dragging the cleanroom wipe across the substrates as this may cause fraying of the wipe and particle generation. 5. Print microarrays using Stealth contact printing technology. Print the microarrays using either Micro Spotting Pins or some other contact or non-contact printing technology. The SpotBot® Personal Microarrayer works well for many applications. For best results use Micro Spotting Solution Plus printing buffer. Load the MirrorEpoxy Microarray Substrates onto the printing surface of a microarraying device, with the corner chamfer located at the upper right corner as shown in Figure 7. Because the highly reflective mirror coating is attached to the backside of the substrate, DO NOT attempt to print on the backside of the Substrate. The printing convention places spot number one in the upper left corner opposite the corner chamfer (see Figure 7). Print the microarrays until all of the samples have been deposited. The maximum recommended printing area is 20 mm x 72 mm, unless barcodes are used and then the printing area will be smaller. 6. Process the printed microarrays. Chemically couple the biomolecules to the MirrorAmine surface and process the printed microarrays to remove unbound material. Optimal protocols for DNA, proteins, small molecules, extracts, cells and other molecules have been developed. One protocol that works well for single- or double-stranded DNA is as follows: (1) Suspend DNA samples in Micro Spotting Solution Plus by mixing 1 volume of 0.2-1.0 µg/µl cDNA products or 60-100 µM oligonucleotides and 1 volume of 2X Micro Spotting Solution Plus, (2) mix the samples by pipetting up and down 10 times, (3) print DNA samples onto MirrorEpoxy Substrates, (4) couple DNA molecules to the surface by incubating for 10 minutes at room temperature (25°C), (5) just prior to use, wash the printed microarrays to remove unbound DNA molecules and printing buffer components from the substrate as follows: wash 2 min at room temperature in 2X SSC + 0.1% sarcosyl, wash 2 min at room temperature in 2X SSC, denature DNA for 2 min at 100°C in dH2O, cool 10 sec at room temperature, and fix by plunging for 2 min in ice cold 100% ethanol. The processed microarrays can be washed using a High Throughput Wash Station and dried using a Microarray High-Speed Centrifuge. Protein microarray applications require different protocols than DNA microarrays. One protocol that works well for protein microarrays is as follows: (1) suspend protein samples in Protein Printing Buffer by mixing 1 volume of 0.2-1.0 µg/µl protein sample in 1X phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and 1 volume of 2X Protein Printing Buffer, (2) mix the samples by pipetting up and down 10 times, (3) print protein samples onto MirrorEpoxy Substrates, (4) couple protein molecules to the surface by incubating for 10 minutes at room temperature (25°C), (5) just prior to use, remove unbound protein molecules and printing buffer components by washing the substrates 3 times for 5 min each at room temperature in 1X PBS, (6) block the surface by incubating the substrates for 30 min at room temperature in 1X PBS + 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA), (7) remove excess BSA by washing three times for 2 min each at room temperature in 1X PBS. Washes should be performed using gentle agitation in a High Throughput Wash Station. Drying can be performed by tapping the processed substrates on a Microarray Cleanroom Wipe or by using a Microarray High-Speed Centrifuge. 7. React microarrays with labeled probes. React the processed microarrays with labeled probe mixtures. Probes can be complex mixtures of labeled or fluorescent nucleic acids, proteins, antibodies, extracts and other substances. Microarray reactions can be performed under glass cover slips at a volume of 2.0 µl per cm2 of cover slip. Protein microarray reactions can be performed under cover slips, as a droplet on the printed microarray, or in a microfluidics chamber. For DNA and protein microarrays, 1-12 hour reactions are sufficient to obtain intense fluorescent signals. Pre-heating DNA probes to 42-65°C just prior to hybridization can greatly reduce background, though protein mixtures should not be pre-heated beyond 37°C. For nucleic acid applications, UniHyb Hybridization Solution, HybIt Hybridization Solution, and HybIt Hybridization Solution work well at a wide range of temperatures and reduce background hybridization is many cases. These buffers can also be used for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis. Buffers consisting of 5X SSC or 6X SSPE and 0.1% SDS can also be used. The addition of 0.2 mg/ml BSA (Worthington) to the hybridization reaction can reduce background. For protein and antibody reactions, binding reactions can be performed in 1X PBS + 0.5% BSA + fluorescent cellular extract or antibodies diluted 1:1,000. Protein fluorescent labeling reagents are available from a large number of vendors. Hybridization Cassettes provide a convenient reaction environment for all types of reactions. Following microarray hybridization and protein binding reactions, unbound fluorescent probe material must be washed away. For cDNA microarrays, the following wash protocol works well: 5 min at room temperature with 2X SSC + 0.1% sarcosyl, 5 min at room temperature with 0.2X SSC + 0.1% sarcosyl, and 1 min at room temperature in 0.2X SSC. For oligonucleotide microarrays, the following wash procedure works well: 5 min at room temperature with 2X SSC + 0.1% sarcosyl, 5 min at room temperature with 2X SSC, and 10 sec at room temperature in 0.2X SSC. For protein microarrays, the following wash procedure works well: three times for 5 min each at room temperature in 1X PBS. DNA and protein washes can be performed using a High Throughput Wash Station, and drying by spinning in a Microarray High-Speed Centrifuge. Excess wash buffer can also be removed from the surface by tapping the substrates on a Microarray Cleanroom Wipe. 8. Detect microarray signals using fluorescence detection device. Suitable detection systems accommodate the 25 mm x 76 mm (1" x 3") substrate and have pixel resolutions from 3-50 µm. Recommended scanning and imaging resolution is ~1/10 spot diameter. High quality scanners and images are available from PerkinElmer, Bio-Rad, Axon, Amersham, Applied Precision, Agilent, and others. Signal-to-noise (SNR) ratios should be 2-10 fold greater than with traditional, non-reflective glass substrates. 9. Analyze and model data. Microarray images should be saved as 16-bit Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) files for ease of quantitation and modeling. Quantitation templates can be superimposed over TIFF images for automated quantitation. Data can be normalized and transformed for greater statistical soundness when comparing multiple channels or microarrays. Scatter plots, principle component analysis (PCA), cluster analysis, self organizing maps (SOMs), expression maps and various supervised methods are among the approaches that can be used for analysis and modeling. High quality tools are available from Applied Maths, Applied Precision, Array Genetics, BioDiscovery, Compugen, Imaging Research Inc., Iobion Informatics, Lion bioscience AG, MediaCybernetics, MiraiBio Inc., PerkinElmer, PREMIER Biosoft, Rosetta Inpharmatics, Silicon Genetics, VisX Labs, and others. Technical Note
The “substrate noise” is the sum of all non-sample and non-instrument contributions to the background reading including intrinsic fluorescence of the substrate and reflection off the substrate surface. Because substrate noise is measured using a scanning or imaging device, as a practical matter substrate noise typically includes intrinsic fluorescence and reflection, as well as all of the sources of instrument noise (e.g. dark current, shot noise, electronic noise and optical noise). Most modern scanners and imagers have very low instrument noise, which means that intrinsic fluorescence and reflection dominate the substrate noise reading. Substrate noise is obtained by measuring the fluorescent reading of the substrate “right out of the box” and prior to reacting the substrate with a fluorescent sample. Please do not confuse substrate noise (i.e. background before the substrate is reacted with a sample) and microarray noise (i.e. background after the substrate has been reacted with a sample), as these two readings are very different. For nearly all applications and assays, microarray noise greatly exceeds substrate noise and therefore concerns about substrate noise are entirely academic because the latter does not contribute to the total background reading observed when the product is used in real experiments (see below). The table below summarizes the substrate noise (actually intrinsic fluorescence + reflection + instrument noise) observed with our substrates. Substrate noise readings were taken at very high sensitivity (90% laser and 90% photomultiplier tube or PMT), settings that are well beyond those used for biological experiments. Typical instrument settings for biological experiments with the ScanArray Express are 20-40% laser power and 80% PMT. The ScanArray Express has 20- to 30-fold greater sensitivity than the ScanArray 3000, and correspondingly the substrate noise readings are up to 30-fold higher on the Express compared to the 3000. Unmodified glass substrates (i.e. SuperClean) produce the lowest substrate noise readings, followed SuperEpoxy, SuperAmine, and SuperAldehyde. Organic treatments (e.g. epoxy, amine and aldehyde) increase substrate noise compared to naked glass because organic molecules formed during derivation fluoresce at an extremely low but detectable level. For nearly all applications and assays, the non-sample contributions to background noise (intrinsic fluorescence, reflection, and instrument noise) are much less than the background noise contributed when the substrate or microarray is reacted with a fluorescent sample. In these cases, substrate noise (though it exists) is irrelevant to the use of our products, because it does not contribute in any measurable way to the background reading of the reacted chip. In rare cases involving extremely low background samples or gene expression measurements of rare transcripts, substrate noise may approach sample noise in magnitude. In these cases, it may be desirable to use a substrate that has a lower intrinsic fluorescence and reflection, such as SuperAmine instead of SuperAldehyde. For best results, please test our products in the context of REAL EXPERIMENTS rather than simply taking note of the fact that our Substrates manifest substrate noise that is greater than plain glass. ALL SUBSTRATES that contain an organic treatment or coating will produce some intrinsic fluorescence and reflection. Please also test our product “right out of the box” rather than waiting hours or days to measure the substrate noise. Fluorescent contaminants present in non-cleanroom air including cleaning agents, solvents used in marking pens, and hydrocarbon emissions from vacuum pumps, arrayers, centrifuges and other instruments can elevate the substrate noise reading considerably. Please also note that airborne particles including dust and other particulates greatly elevate the background reading because these particles are highly reflective in the presence of laser and white excitation light. Understanding the technical details of our products is important and we recommend that you commit these concepts to working memory as you proceed with your experiments. Table. Substrate noise
Troubleshooting Tips
2. High background fluorescence
Scientific Publications Recommended Equipment and Reagents Ordering Information
*International pricing may vary as much as 30% (or more depending on country) due to import duties, stocking fees and technical support. *To order ArrayIt® Brand Products: call 408-744-1331, fax 408-744-1711, email arrayit@arrayit.com, or click on the Purchase button to proceed directly to the purchase page. Storage Conditions Warranty
Copyright 1993-2008 TeleChem International, Inc. All rights reserved. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||