Methods, apparatus and systems for production, collection, handling, and imaging of tissue sections
09927327 ยท 2018-03-27
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y10T156/1062
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T156/1059
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T156/1712
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T156/1057
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T156/12
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T156/1052
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
G01N1/286
PHYSICS
Y10T156/1322
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
Methods, apparatus and systems for collecting thin tissue samples for imaging. Thin tissue sections may be cut from tissue samples using a microtome-quality knife. In one example, tissue samples are mounted to a substrate that is rotated such that thin tissue sections are acquired via lathing. Collection of thin tissue sections may be facilitated by a conveyor belt. Thin tissue sections may be mounted to a thin substrate (e.g., by adhering thin tissue sections to a thin substrate via a roller mechanism) that may be imaged, for example, by an electron beam (e.g., in an electron microscope). Thin tissue sections may be strengthened before cutting via a blockface thinfilm deposition technique and/or a blockface taping technique. An automated reel-to-reel imaging technique may be employed for collected/mounted tissue sections to facilitate random-access imaging of tissue sections and maintaining a comprehensive library including a large volume of samples.
Claims
1. An apparatus for processing a tissue sample, the apparatus comprising: a conductive support tape having a surface upon which to support a thin tissue section, the support tape adapted for electron microscopy; a conveyor portion constructed and arranged to automatically guide the support tape having the thin tissue section disposed thereon from a first location toward a second location; and a collection portion for collecting the support tape and the thin tissue section from the conveyor region.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the collection portion comprises a take-up reel for collecting the support tape and the thin tissue section.
3. A system for processing a tissue sample, the system comprising: a cutting surface for contacting the tissue sample so as to liberate a thin tissue section that includes at least a portion of the tissue sample; a water bath constructed and arranged to contain water having a surface for supporting the thin tissue section; a conductive support tape for collecting the thin tissue section from the surface of the water on to the support tape, the support tape adapted for electron microscopy; and a conveyor device upon which the support tape is disposed having a conveyor surface for automatically guiding the support tape and the thin tissue section toward a collection portion.
4. The system of claim 3, wherein the collection portion comprises a take-up reel for collecting the support tape and the thin tissue section.
5. The system of claim 3, wherein the surface of the support tape is adapted to support a plurality of thin tissue sections.
6. The system of claim 3, wherein the thin tissue section is less than 1 micron in thickness.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the thin tissue section is between 100 nm and 1 micron in thickness.
8. The system of claim 3, wherein the cutting surface comprises an ultramicrotome-quality knife.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In all drawings like reference numbers represent corresponding parts throughout:
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DRAWINGSREFERENCE NUMERALS
(30) 100Axle 102Central hole in axle 104Center-drilled ends of axle 106Silicone rubber bottom embedding mold 108Mold cavity (of part 106) 110Axle seal hole (of part 106) 112Liquid embedding resin 120Silicone rubber toothed embedding mold 122Axle seal hole (of part 120) 124Mold teeth (count of 30) 126Schematic of curing oven 130Partially cured embedding resin 132Tooth-indentation cavities (count of 30) 1401 mm.sup.3 tissue cube (count of 27) 150Silicone rubber top embedding mold 152Axle seal hole (of part 150) 154Resin fill-ports (of part 150) 160Axle-mounted cylindrical tissue block 162Part of tissue block without tissue cube (count of 3) 200Automatic taping lathe-microtome 201Lathe body 202Lathe headstock spindle bearing 204Lathe tailstock with live center 206Lathe spindle and belt drive 208Precision DC gearhead motor 210Precision linear translation stage 212Precision linear motorized actuator 214Microtome knife 216Lathe dog 218Film and adhesive blockface-application mechanism 300Tape-web assembly 301Tape (full web) 302Final composite tissue tape-sandwich take-up reel 304Top base tape feed roll 305Top base tape (unprocessed) 306Tape hole puncher mechanism 308Tape drive rollers 309Web slack region before blockface taping 310Freshly cut surface of cylindrical tissue block 312TEM support film applicator head 314TEM support film smoothing and drying roller mechanism 316Block surface with TEM support film 318Adhesive strip applicator heads (count of 2) 320Adhesive strips smoothing and drying roller mechanism 322Block surface with TEM support film and adhesive strips 330Blockface taping pressure roller 332Section of top base tape adhered to blockface 334Freshly microtomed ribbon of tissue adhered to top base tape 336Bottom base tape applicator (print head) and blowout hole mechanism 338Final TEM-ready composite tissue tape-sandwich (abbreviated: tissue tape) 400Single microtomed tissue slice (1 mm.sup.2, 100 nm-1 m thick) 402Ribbon of tissue slices in embedding medium 404TEM support film coating 406Adhesive strips 408Top base tape 409Viewing hole cut in top tape directly over tissue slice 410Bottom base tape 411Viewing hole cut in bottom tape directly over tissue slice 500Electron tomography tape cassette 502TEM mounting flange 504TEM specimen stage body (vacuum seals to TEM) 506Cassette reels and drive motors (count of 2) for tissue tape 508TEM sample stage tip mechanism 510Tissue slice clamped in position for TEM imaging 512Tomography tilt-series drive motor 520Tissue tape image-securing top clamps (count of 2) 521Tissue tape image-securing bottom clamps (count of 2) 522Blowout hole in wrap-around portion of tissue tape 524Blowout hole tape length adjust pulley 530Transmission electron microscope (TEM) 600Water boat for tissue collection 602Water 610Partially-submerged conveyor-belt 612Submerged pulley 614Bottom base tape hole puncher 616Pressure roller 618Tape-sandwich sealing mechanism
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(31) In the following description of the preferred embodiment, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration a specific embodiment in which the invention may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
(32) Overview
(33) The present invention discloses a device, an automated taping lathe-microtome, and a set of associated methods and apparatuses for fully automating the collection, handling, and imaging of large numbers of serial tissue sections. In order to most clearly describe these methods and apparatuses I will first briefly outline the current method of producing serial tissue sections for TEM (transmission electron microscopic) imaging.
(34) Current State-of-the-Art
(35) Classical TEM tissue processing and imaging methods begin by embedding an approximately 1 mm.sup.3 piece of biological tissue that has been fixed with mixed aldehydes, post-fixed with osmium tetroxide, and infiltrated with an embedding resin. This single tissue cube is then placed in a silicone rubber mold which is then filled with liquid embedding resin. The mold is placed in an oven in order to cure the resin and tissue into a hard tissue block. This tissue block is then clamped in the chuck of a microtome (for TEM use this is also called an ultramicrotome).
(36) This chuck is mechanically actuated to allow the tissue block to be driven down in a smooth trajectory across a very sharp knife thus liberating a slice of the embedded tissue suitably thinned to allow TEM imaging. In sliding and rotary microtome designs the chuck is moved along a linear trajectory across the blade. (The rotation in a rotary microtome is referring to a crank wheel that is rotated by the operator. That rotation is converted to a linear motion of the chuck.) In a disc microtome (see U.S. Utility Pat. No. 6,253,653) the trajectory of chuck movement is along a circular arc; however, the sliding, rotary, and disc microtomes' motions are all inherently saltatory using a discontinuous ratcheting motion where the knife engages and disengages the tissue block every slice. Sequential tissue sections are produced by ratcheting the chuck forward toward the knife a small distance after each slice.
(37) The resulting thin tissue slices are typically less than 1 m thick and are extremely fragile. In fact, they are so fragile that they would be destroyed if one attempted to remove them from the bare surface of the knife which produced them. For this reason, the knife has a boat of water attached to it in such a manner as to allow newly cut tissue to float on the water (supported by surface tension) immediately subsequent to its cutting from the tissue block. This technique protects the fragile tissue section from friction induced mechanical damage which would occur from extended contact with the knife's body. A histology technician then manually scoops the floating tissue section (or short series of sections) onto a slotted TEM specimen grid, one whose slot opening has been previously coated with an ultra-thin film of plastic TEM support film. This support film is strong enough to provide support for the tissue section bridging the slot's gap, but still thin enough to allow unobstructed TEM viewing.
(38) To image this tissue section, the specimen grid is placed in a TEM specimen stage and manually inserted into the vacuum port of a TEM. Vacuum is pulled on the TEM, and the specimen is finally imaged via the TEM's electron beam. Reliably producing, collecting, and imaging thousands of serial sections from a single block is required to reconstruct even cubic millimetersized volumes of neural tissue, and this is virtually impossible to accomplish using these classical methods and microtome designs.
(39) Key Innovations Disclosed Here
(40) The innovations disclosed here are designed to bring a high degree of automation to this entire process of tissue collection, handling, and imaging; thus allowing the mass production of serial sections for large-volume 3D reconstruction research. This automated mass production is accomplished by the following innovations to the classical methods and microtome designs: Innovation #1: Embed multiple tissue cubes in a single block and process them all at the same time. Innovation #2: Use an axle-mounted cylindrical tissue block and continuous lathe slicing motion (instead of the traditional discontinuous ratcheting motion of current sliding, rotary, and disc microtome designs). Innovation #3: Strengthen the tissue sections before cutting by use of blockface thinfilm deposition and blockface taping, thus making subsequent steps more reliable. Innovation #4: Collect tissue sections by the thousands via a tape-sandwich that doubles as a durable handling and storage medium, as well as a TEM imaging specimen grid. Innovation #5: Load entire tissue-tape (containing thousands of serial sections) into the electron microscope all at once, threading the tape through the electron beam in a fashion similar to film in a movie projector. This allows random-access imaging of any tissue section on the entire tape without forfeiting the time needed to crack the TEM's vacuum and re-pumping.
(41) The preferred embodiment of these innovations will now be described in the following logical order: 1. Description of the axle-mounted cylindrical tissue block embedding method and mold tooling. 2. Description of the automatic taping lathe-microtome mechanical design and operation. 3. Description of the electron tomography tape cassette mechanical design and operation.
Axle-Mounted Cylindrical Tissue Block Embedding Method and Tooling
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(48) In step seven of the embedding process, depicted in
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(51) Automatic Taping Lathe-Microtome Mechanical Design and Operation
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(53) On the side of the lathe body 201 the standard lathe cross-slide has been replaced by a precision linear translation stage 210. This stage is driven by a precision linear motorized actuator 212 which is capable of providing the sub-micron movements necessary for TEM microtomy. Attached to the linear translation stage 210 is the microtome knife 214. This assembly enables the knife 214 to be slowly pressed against the rotating cylindrical tissue block 160 in a lathe-like fashion thus liberating a ribbon of tissue into the tape-web assembly 300. The tape-web assembly 300 holds the tape 301 inline with the rotating cylindrical tissue block 160 such that blockface taping can proceed at a continuous rate in synchrony with the continuous lathe-like cutting of the rotating cylindrical tissue block 160. This continuous blockface taping process will be detailed below. Also shown in
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(55) Starting at the top of the mechanism, a top base tape feed roll 304 supplies a continuous stream of plastic tape 305 into the mechanism. A tape hole puncher mechanism 306 punches square viewing holes into the plastic top base tape 305. The tape is driven forward by tape drive rollers 308 which maintain a slack (no tension) region 309 in the web. This slack region assures that no tension forces from the tape disturb the motion of the cylindrical tissue block 160 or the blockface taping process.
(56) The slack, hole-cut tape 309 is adhered to the block 160's surface at a blockface taping pressure roller 330. The timing of the hole cutting performed by the tape hole puncher mechanism 306 is synchronized to the current angle of the cylindrical tissue block 160 such that each hole will be precisely aligned directly over an embedded tissue cube 140 when the tape 309 is adhered to the block 160. A section 332 of top base tape is adhered for a quarter-turn of the block 160 before it is sliced off the block 160 at the knife 214 along with a thin ribbon 402 (detailed in
(57) The ribbon of tissue adhered to tape 334 is reeled up by a final composite tissue tape-sandwich take-up reel 302, but before it gets there the tape 334 is driven past a bottom base tape applicator (and blowout hole mechanism) 336 that applies (prints) a covering bottom base tape 410 (detailed in
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(60) Seen in the close up view offered by
(61) Electron Tomography Tape Cassette Mechanical Design and Operation
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(64) This blowout hole 522 is one of a multitude of blowout holes spaced periodically throughout the tape 338. These holes are made within the automatic taping lathe microtome's bottom tape applicator and blowout hole mechanism 336 by simply directing a puff of air at the fragile section of sliced ribbon 402 in periodically spaced frames of the tissue tape 338. Recall that a few tooth-indentation cavities 132 are specifically left empty of tissue cubes 140 during the embedding process for this reason. Thus, the final axle-mounted tissue block 160 had three tissue-free regions 162 around its periphery (see
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(68) At each angle, a 2D electron micrograph is produced and all 121 of these images are fed into a standard electron tomographic volume reconstruction algorithm in order to compute a 3D voxel volume digital image of the particular piece of tissue 510 under examination. The system is designed such that any of the multitude of tissue slices in the tissue-tape 338 loaded into the electron tomography tape cassette 500 can be randomly and automatically accessed for 2D or 3D tomographic imaging (at ultrastructure resolution) without ever cracking the vacuum of the TEM. Thus, this avoids any time-consuming manual intervention in the imaging process.
Summary of Preferred Embodiment
(69) This concludes the description of the preferred embodiment of the automatic taping lathe-microtome and associated methods and apparatuses for the automated production, collection, handling, and imaging of large numbers of serial tissue sections. Hopefully it can now be appreciated that this disclosed set of methods and apparatuses addresses many (if not all) aspects pertaining to the true automation of the process of 3D serial reconstruction of biological (especially neural) tissue. The methods and apparatuses disclosed cover changes to the standard practices ranging from the initial tissue embedding process, through the microtomy process, and all the way to the TEM imaging process. They form an integrated set of process and mechanical design changes meant to allow 3D ultrastructure reconstructions of large volumes of neural tissue to be reliably and efficiently produced. The ability to automate the production of such large-scale ultrastructure reconstructions of neural tissue would prove incredibly important to the neuroscience research community just as the ability to automate the sequencing of large stretches of DNA has already proved incredibly important to the genetics research community over the past decade.
(70) Alternative Embodiments of the Automatic Taping Lathe-Microtome
(71) The following describes some alternative embodiments for the automatic taping lathe-microtome. The following descriptions of alternative embodiments of the invention are presented for the purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed.
(72) These alternative designs involve variations on the blockface taping and tissue collection processes. These designs are depicted in a series of schematic side views in
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(78) Another alternative embodiment, which is not depicted in the figures, is to forgo cutting viewing holes in the top and/or bottom base tapes within the microtome, and instead, as a later step, etch these holes using an acid to reveal the tissue slices within. If the top and bottom base tapes are made of a solid material (preferably a metal such as copper) and no holes are cut in the microtome in these tapes, then the composite tape sandwich taken-up on the final take-up reel 302 will not be ready for imaging since the tissue slices between the top and bottom tapes will be hidden by the overlying tapes. This tape-sandwich can then be put through an etching machine where a mask is placed around each section of tape covering up all areas of tape except those having tissue directly beneath. Then the tape is exposed to an etchant (acid in the case of metal tapes) that will dissolve the parts of the top and bottom tape directly above and below each tissue slice. The etchant is chosen so as not to damage the delicate tissue slice which is revealed via the etching process. The advantage of this viewing hole etching method is that it allows the blockface taping step to proceed with a solid tape instead of one with viewing holes. This implies that the tissue slice being cut can be supported across its entire width during the cutting procedure.
(79) Once again, these descriptions of alternative embodiments of the invention were presented for the purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible. It is intended that the scope of the invention be limited not by this detailed description of the preferred embodiment or the alternative embodiments, but rather by the claims section to follow.
ADVANTAGES AND CONCLUSIONS
(80) We will now summarize the key advantages of the present invention over the current state-of-the-art in serial section production, collection, handling, and imaging.
(81) Advantage #1: The present invention allows for the processing of multiple tissue cubes simultaneously by embedding a multitude of tissue cubes in a single axle-mounted tissue block.
(82) Advantage #2: The novel design of the automatic taping lathe-microtome departs most radically from current sliding, rotary, and disc microtome designs in that it makes possible a smooth, continuous slicing motion where the knife never disengages from the tissue block during operation. This offers a distinct improvement in the fundamental reliability of the slicing operation in that a continuous, non-disengaging, lathing action can be made much more stable than current microtomes which use a discontinuous ratcheting motion. This is a crucial improvement if thousands of thin tissue slices are to be produced without error in a fully automatic manner.
(83) Advantage #3: Because the slicing action of the automatic taping lathe-microtome proceeds in a smooth, continuous manner (where the knife never disengages from the tissue block during operation) it is now possible to include in the design continuous blockface taping where the tape never disengages from the block. This represents a dramatic simplification in the process of blockface taping over any proposed automation of blockface taping in discontinuous motion microtomes (which by their nature necessitate the tape to engage and disengage during any blockface taping operation as well).
(84) This blockface taping technique, along with the novel technique of blockface deposition of the TEM support film, strengthens the tissue sections before cutting by making the thin slice required for TEM work appear thicker and stronger before the time of slicing. As importantly, continuous blockface taping also allows the freshly liberated tissue slice (ribbon) to be collected automatically as part of the tissue tape-sandwich.
(85) Advantage #4: All aspects of the current invention are centered on producing and using the TEM-ready tissue tape-sandwich 338. This novel collection, storage, and imaging medium has no direct analogy in current electron microscopy practice. It has the potential to replace the water boat as a slice-collection device and the TEM slot grid as a sample holding device thus eliminating the arduous manual steps of water boat slice retrieval and grid mounting. Unlike the storage tape proposed by Bolles which only allows light-microscopic imaging, the tissue tape-sandwich in this invention allows for TEM viewing by integrating a series of viewing holes into both top and bottom base tapes and by using the novel technique of blockface deposition of the TEM support film.
(86) Advantage #5; Finally, this TEM-ready tissue tape-sandwich containing many thousands of individual tissue slices (representing perhaps many cubic millimeters of neural tissue volume) can be loaded, all at once, into a single TEM using the novel electron tomography tape cassette. That invention allows the tissue tape to be threaded through a standard TEM's electron beam in a fashion similar to film in a movie projector. This allows any tissue section on the entire tape (i.e. any point within the sliced volume) to be randomly accessed for ultrastructure imaging without forfeiting the time needed to crack the TEM's vacuum and repumping.
(87) The truly automated production, handling, storage, and random-access imaging of TEM-ready serial tissue sections made possible by the disclosed innovations could even make possible new ways of thinking about how TEM imaging is applied to neuroscience research. For instance, it might make possible the establishment of tissue-tape libraries storing the volume of entire mammalian brains and containing vastly more tissue slices than could ever be methodically imaged in total. Such tape libraries would instead be made available online to the entire research community for random-access imaging on request. One could as well imagine automated image-sequence direction algorithms putting the random-access imaging capability to use for following and imaging multi-scale structures of interest such as the torturously long, thin, and complexly intertwined axonal and dendritic processes of the brain. These could be traced and imaged across multiple tissue slices contained on the same tape all without user intervention. The benefits to the neuroscience research community of such efficient multi-scale (ultrastructure to whole brain) imaging could be enormous.