Advance May Put Gene Chip Technology On Scientists' Desktops
Article originally published in September, 1999
MADISON -The most insightful technology in modern genetics, the gene chip,
which permits scientists to analyze thousands of genes at once, may soon
come within easy reach of most biologists.
Amasino is being recognized for his studies of processes that
regulate flowering time in plants and the mechanisms that control
senescence, the process by which leaves age and drop from plants. Those
findings help explain how plants regulate important activities; they have
far-reaching implications for agriculture.
Writing in the October issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology, a group
of scientists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison describe a new way
to cheaply and simply manufacture the customized chips capable of
deconstructing long segments of DNA. The technique enables biologists to
scour huge chunks of animal and plant genomes in search of the genes that
promote disease, the genetic switches that govern such biological phenomena
as aging, and the DNA codes that permit microorganisms to make antibiotics.
At present, such chips are available only from a single company, Affymetrix
of Santa Clara, Calif. Off the shelf versions of Affymetrix chips cost
$2,500. Customized chips containing DNA from specific organisms or tissues
can take months to make and cost as much as $12,000 each.
"Now, the chips are expensive. You use it one time and throw it away," said
Roland Green, a UW-Madison post-doctoral fellow and a lead author of the
Nature Biotechnology paper.
The new technique, according to Michael Sussman, a UW-Madison professor of
horticulture and genetics, and a co-author of the paper, is known as MAS
for Maskless Array Synthesizer. It promises to take the technology and put
it in the laboratory of virtually any research biologist.
"This technology could sit on anyone's bench top," said Sussman. "It will
give people the ability to make any array of synthetic compounds, any time."
Gene chip technology now depends on photolithography, a process that
requires shining ultraviolet light through a series of stencil-like masks
onto a glass chip resulting in the synthesis of tens of thousands of DNA
molecules of interest. Each DNA molecule synthesized on such a chip, said
Sussman, is like a window to a wealth of genetic information, providing a
glimpse of the workings of tens of thousands of genes found in the cells of
living organisms.
A recent example of gene chip technology at work was the report of another
group of Wisconsin scientists who used a gene chip to discover the genes
involved in the process of aging in mice.
But making those chips and their masks, each customized to dissect a
specific problem in genomic analysis, is a clumsy, time-consuming and
expensive process. Sometimes, as many as 100 masks are required to make a
single chip that has as many as 500,000 tiny, DNA-laden compartments.
The new technology reported by the Wisconsin team capitalizes on an
off-the-shelf Texas Instruments technology used in overhead projection
known as Digital Light Processors. At the heart of the technology is an
array of 480,000 tiny aluminum mirrors arranged on a computer chip.
By manipulating the mirrors, the Wisconsin team, an unusual mix of
molecular biologists and semiconductor engineers, found that they could
shine light in very specific patterns, eliminating entirely the need for
the delicate and expensive masks used in traditional DNA chip technology.
The MAS process for making customized DNA chips, according to UW-Madison
professor of electrical and computer engineering Franco Cerrina, can be
likened to desktop publishing: "Instead of several weeks, it takes eight
hours to make a chip," he said, and the cost of producing such chips is
reduced significantly.
The MAS process for making customized DNA chips, according to UW-Madison
professor of electrical and computer engineering Franco Cerrina, can be
likened to desktop publishing: "Instead of several weeks, it takes eight
hours to make a chip," he said, and the cost of producing such chips is
reduced significantly.
Moreover, MAS has the potential to be used to clinically diagnose genetic
disease in humans, and holds great promise for various drug discovery
schemes, and the testing of other biological building blocks such as
proteins and carbohydrates.
The Wisconsin group has applied for a patent for the new technology through
the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, a not-for-profit corporation that
manages intellectual property on behalf of UW-Madison scientists. Rights to
the technology have been licensed to a Madison-based company known as
NimbleGen Systems.
NimbleGen, founded by three of the paper's authors, will focus on
development and commercialization of the new technology.
The Wisconsin team includes Green of the UW-Madison Environmental
Toxicology Program; physicist Sangeet Singh-Gasson, now of the University
of Illinois at Chicago; Yongjian Yue of the UW-Madison department of
electrical and computer engineering; Clark Nelson of the UW-Madison
Biotechnology Center; Fred Blattner, UW-Madison professor of genetics;
Sussman; and Cerrina.
***
Writer: Terry Devitt (608) 262-8282; trdevitt@facstaff.wisc.edu
CONTACT: Michael R. Sussman (608) 262-8608, msussman@facstaff.wisc.edu;
Roland Green (608) 262-1779, rdgreen@students.wisc.edu;
Franco Cerrina (608) 263-4955, cerrina@xraylith.wisc.edu
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