BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention generally relates to heat block incubation and more specifically to a combination vessel holder for heat block incubation that, in one mode, directly accommodates sample tubes of varying sizes, and in another mode, accommodates multi-well plates or strips that contain the samples.
The “96 well plate” and “8 well strip” are popular, commercially standard laboratory vessels used in Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) and other processes. PCR requires cycles of repeated healing and cooling, to generate multiple copies of a DNA sequence that can be used for research. PCR may utilize a block of thermally conductive material to transfer heat from an oven to the incubated material, in order to ensure that the required incubation temperatures are quickly and accurately applied to the material. A standard 96 well plate is a rectangular 8×12 array of liquid retainers arranged in perpendicular rows and columns, spaced 9 mm vertically and horizontally apart. This is similar to 12 rows of 8 well strips. Current systems have blocks for PCR plates that consist of a single, solid block, and utilize different blocks for differently sized tubes.
It would be desirable to have a combination vessel for heat block incubation that by itself accepts a variety of differently sized samples and in combination accepts a standard 96 well plate.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn one aspect of the present invention, a device for use with a heat source, a multi-well sample plate, and a plurality of samples includes a substantially solid block of thermally conductive material having a first side and a second side generally opposite the first side; a first array of apertures on the first side of the block that aligns with wells of a first portion of the sample plate; and a second array of apertures on the second side of the block; wherein, in a first mode, the first array of apertures retains and engages with the sample plate to conduct heat from the heat source to the plate, and in a second mode, the second array of apertures retains and engages with the samples to conduct heat from the heat source to the samples.
In another aspect of the present invention, a multi-well plate container system includes a first thermally conductive block having a array of apertures on a plate side adapted to retain a first half of a multi-well plate; and a second thermally conductive block having a array of apertures on a plate side adapted to retain a second half of the multi-well plate in conjunction with the first block; wherein either the first block, the second block, or both blocks further have a second side adapted to retain a plurality of test tubes in an alternate usage.
In yet another aspect of the present invention, a method of incubating a material includes providing two substantially solid blocks of thermally conductive material, each block having a first side and a second side generally opposite the first side, a first array of apertures on the first side of the block that aligns with wells of half of a multi-well sample plate that contains the material, and a second array of apertures on the second side of the block that are adapted to retain the material in an alternate usage; aligning the two blocks side-by-side; placing the multi-well plate on the two blocks so that the blocks retain and engage with the wells of the plate; and heating the blocks, thereby incubating the material in the wells of the plate.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSFIG. 1 depicts an industry standard 96 well plate;
FIG. 2 depicts the plate side of an embodiment of a block according to the present invention;
FIG. 3 depicts the sample tube side of the embodiment ofFIG. 2;
FIG. 4 depicts a plate container system having two blocks according to the present invention; and
FIG. 5 depicts the container system ofFIG. 4 in use with a standard 96 well plate.
DETAILED DESCRIPTIONThe preferred embodiment and other embodiments, which can be used in industry and include the best mode now known of carrying out the invention, are hereby described in detail with reference to the drawings. Further embodiments, features and advantages will become apparent from the ensuing description, or may be learned without undue experimentation. The figures are not necessarily drawn to scale, except where otherwise indicated. The following description of embodiments, even if phrased in terms of “the invention” or what the embodiment “is,” is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but describes the manner and process of making and using the invention. The coverage of this patent will be described in the claims. The order in which steps are listed in the claims does not necessarily indicate that the steps must be performed in that order.
An embodiment of the present invention generally provides a heat incubation block having openings for sample tubes and sample plates on two or more sides of the block. Embodiments may be utilized for Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) incubation systems. The block transfers heat from a heating instrument to the samples. The block may be aligned with a second similar block, to provide a single block that retains a commercially standard multi-well PCR plate. The block may be substantially made of aluminum or other thermally conductive material, to be light and efficiently conduct heat. Embodiments may support various sizes of multi-well sample plates, such as 8×1 (8 well strips), 8×12 (96 wells), 16×24 (384 wells), or 32×48 (1536 wells). An embodiment may include an oven with a heat chamber that is slightly larger than 2 half-sized blocks, so that (for example) two 8×6 blocks may be joined together to hold a 96 well plate.
An embodiment of the present invention may include an aluminum block for insertion into a heating chamber or other heat source with precise openings for insertion of sample tubes, sample strips, and PCR plates, resulting in temperature transfer from the heating chamber to the samples. The block conducts heat, and is an incubator for a PCR oven or chamber. The block may have six sides, with at least two sides for samples. One side may contain openings for directly accommodating sample tubes and/or sample strips, and an opposite side may contain openings that correspond to the wells of half of a PCR plate or other multi-well sample plate. In one mode of usage, two blocks may be aligned in conjunction with one another and in combination with an appropriate oven to allow for the accommodation of a single PCR plate on the second sides of the blocks. In a second mode of usage, the test tubes or other samples are directly inserted into the apertures on the first side of a block.
An embodiment of a block may be drilled out on both sides so that the user may use either side for different purposes, as needed. The first side (the “sample tube side”) may have a plurality of drilled holes of different sizes for specific test tube sizes, to be used for heating inside these instruments. The second side (the “96-well plate side”) may have appropriate apertures so that that two devices may be used in conjunction with one another to accommodate a “96 well microplate”, which is a popular laboratory vessel used for test tubes.
The 96-well plate side of an embodiment may have a matrix of apertures. A rectangular matrix of 8 by 12 apertures may have walls to support the test tube, and the walls may be spaced 9 mm vertically and horizontally. The wells of the PCR plate or strips fit into the apertures of the block, so that when samples are placed in the apertures, the block retains and efficiently conducts heat to the samples.
The sample tube side of an embodiment may have sample containers of various sizes. The containers may be adapted to accept sample tubes (aka test tubes). Typical test tube sizes may include
Examples of micro test tubes may include 1.5 ml (generally 10.5×41 mm, tapered atbottom 20 mm), 2.0 ml (like 1.5 ml but tapered only at bottom 3 mm), and 0.5 ml (generally 7.5×32 mm, tapered bottom 14 mm), or 0.2 ml (generally 6 mm). Different brands may vary as much a 1 mm in diameter or 3 mm in length. The sample tubes may contain DNA, RNA, protein, or other materials for incubation.
FIG. 1 depicts an industry standard 96well plate10. It contains 96sample retainers12, which are adapted to hold DNA samples to be incubated, such as liquid DNA samples for PCR. An 8×1 well strip (not shown) would be similar to a single column of the 8×12 well plate.
As depicted inFIG. 2, an embodiment of the present invention may include ablock20 with a first,plate side22 and a second,sample tube side24 generally opposite theplate side22. Theplate side22 may include an 8×6 array ofplate apertures26, which would correspond to half of a commercially standard (8×12) 96 well PCR plate. This side may have a first registration/handling element28, which can be used with an appropriate tool to handle and align theblock20 for use. The apertures may be shaped to snugly fit the liquid containers of the PCR plate. When in use, the PCR plate contains the actual DNA material for incubation, and the block effectively conducts heat to the PCR plate.
As depicted inFIG. 3, thesample tube side24 of ablock20 may include an array ofsample apertures30 that are adapted to directly contain test tubes, sample tubes, or sample strips. This side may have a second registration/handling element32. Theapertures30 may provide a generally conical or cylindrical shaped structure that engages with the sides of a sample tube, such as a micro test tube, to provide efficient heat transfer between the block and the test tube.
As depicted inFIG. 4, aplate container system40 may include twoblocks20, placed side-by-side to a system, so that they could accommodate a standard 96 well plate. Theblocks20 may simply be placed side by side, and the plate will fit over the combined structure, or there may be additional structures (not shown) to retain the plates together and form a system that holds a 96 well plate.
As depicted inFIG. 5, aplate container system40 may include twoblocks20 that accommodate a standard 96well plate10. Thesample retainers12 of theplate10 slide into theplate apertures26 and make contact with theblocks20 so that heat can be transferred to samples in thesample retainers12. The first registration/handling element28 on eachblock20 may extend past theplate10 to facilitate handling and positioning of theplate container system40 with theplate10 in place. In use, the heating chamber may be slightly larger than the blocks so that, when the blocks are inserted into the chamber, the blocks are effectively connected together by the heating chamber.