Assay flow apparatus and method

5565365
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Inventors

Glass, Thomas R.

Application #

437969

Filed

May-10-1995

Published

Oct-15-1996

Current US Class

210/222
210/695
422/101
422/311
436/501
436/526
436/810

International Classes

G01N 033/553

Field of Search

422/56 422/60 422/99 422/101 422/82.08 422/311 436/501 436/161 436/810 436/526 210/198.2 210/263 210/223 210/290 210/291 210/656 210/679 210/222 210/695 204/155 209/213 209/214

Assignee

Sapidyne, Inc. (Boise, ID)

Examiners

Warden; Robert

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Choate, Hall & Stewart

US Patent References

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Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

Friguet et al., "Measurements of the true affinity constant in solution of antigen-antibody complexes by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay", Jour. of Immun. Methods, 77, pp. 305-319, 1985. Plant et al., "Liposome-Enhanced Flow Injection Immunoanalysis"., Biotechnology, vol. 6., Mar. 1988., pp. 266-269. Sato et al., "A Novel Method for Isolating Specific Endocytic Vesicles Using Very Fine Ferrite Particles Coated With Biological Ligands and the High-Gradient Magnetic Separation Technique"., J. Biochem., vol. 100; No. 6., 1986; 1481-1492. Gunaratna et al., "Noncompetitive flow injection immunoassay for a hapten, .alpha.-(Difluoromethyl)ornithine", Anal. Chem, 1993, 65, pp. 1152-1157. G. Gubitz et al., "Flow-injection immunassays", Analytica Chimica Acta, 283, 1993, pp. 421-428. Pollema et al., "Flow injection renewable surface immunoassay: a new approach to immunoanalysis with fluorescence detection", Anal. Chem., 1994, pp. 1825-1831. Sambucetti et al., "Process For Purification of Magnetic Ink", IBM Technical Disclosure Bulletin, vol. 18, No. 2, Jul. 1975. Freytag et al., "Affinity-Column-Mediated Immunoenzymometric Assays: Influence of Affinity-Column Ligand and Valency of Antibody-Enzyme Conjugates", Clin. Chem., V. 30, No. 9, 1494-1498, 1984. Freytag et al., "A Highly Sensitive Affinity-Column-Mediated Immunometric Assay, as Exemplified by Digoxin", Clin. Chem., V. 30, No. 3, 417-420, 1984. O'Shannessy et al., "Determination of Rate of Equilibrium Binding Constants for Macromolecular Interactions Using Surface Plasmon Resonance: Use of Nonlinear Least Squares Analysis Methods", Anal. Biochem, V. 212, 457-468, 1993. Ralf W. Glaser, "Antigen-Antibody Binding and Mass Transport by Convection and Diffusion to a Surface: A Two-Dimensional Computer Model of Binding and Dissociation Kinetics", Anal. Biochem., V. 213, 152-161, 1993. Warren J. Smith, "Modern Optical Engineering. The Design of Optical Systems", McGraw-Hill, Inc. (pubs) .COPYRGT.1966. Hudson, "Infrared Systems Engineering", Wiley-Interscience, 1969. Pollema et al., "Sequential Injection Immunoassay Utilizing Immunomagnetic Beads", Anal. Chem., vol. 64, 1356-1361, 1992. Forrest, "Development and Application Of A Fully Automated Continous Flow Radioimmunoassay System", Ann. Clin. Biochem., V. 14, 1-11, 1977. M. E. Jolley et al., "Particle Concentration Fluorescence Immunoassay (PCFIA); A New Rapid Immunoassay Technique with High Sensitivity", Journal of Immunological Methods, vol. 67, 21-35, 1984.

Citation

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Abstract
A system for assaying a fluid sample by detection of radiation emitted from a ligand/conjugate complex formed on a plurality of beads dimensioned within a specified range of diameters, the beads being disposed as a porous mass in a conduit adjacent a fluid-porous screen having pores of lesser diameter than the range of diameters of the beads. A plurality of paramagnetic particles is suspended across the conduit by a magnetic field of sufficient intensity to array the paramagnetic particles as the fluid-porous screen.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A flow cell for use with a fluid sample comprising, in combination:

elongated conduit means;

a mass of paramagnetic particles disposed in said conduit means; and

means for establishing within said conduit means a gradient of magnetic flux density, said means being selected, and being positioned relative to said conduit means, so that said gradient is sufficient to cooperate with said mass of paramagnetic particles to form a substantially self-supporting fluid-porous screen spanning the cross-sectional area of said conduit means, whereby, when a fluid sample containing particulates is flowed through said conduit, said screen mechanically separates those particulates having a predetermined size from said fiuid sample and supports said separated particulates of predetermined size in said conduit.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to chemical and biochemical assays, and more particularly to an improved optical apparatus and methods for radiation-emitting assays.

Assays are well known in which aliquots of sample-under-test one or more reagents are variously reacted in highly specific reactions to form ligand/conjugate complexes such as antigen/antibody or similar complexes which may then be observed in order to assay the sample for a titer of a predetermined moiety from the sample. Typically, an antibody is used to assay for the presence of an antigen for which the antibody is specific, but such assays have been extended to quantitate haptens such as hormones, alkaloids, steroids, antigens, antibodies, nucleic acids, and fragments thereof. It is in this broad sense that the term "ligand/conjugate" as used herein should be understood.

Sensitive immunoassays typically use tracer techniques in which a tagged constituent of the complex is incorporated, for example in the reagent, the non-complex tagged reagent then being separated from the complexed reagent. The complex can be thereafter quantitated by observing a signal from the tag. Radioisotopes, fluorescent and chemiluminescent molecules, colorimetric tags, and other radiation-emitting markers have been used to label constituents or moieties of the complex, appropriate apparatus being employed to detect and measure the radiation from the label.
 
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