SBIR-STTR Award

Detachable Nozzle Piezoelectric Dispense System for Cryo-Tem Sample Preparation
Award last edited on: 10/30/14

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIGMS
Total Award Amount
$149,800
Award Phase
1
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Peter Kahn

Company Information

Engineering Arts LLC

P.O. Box 51120
Phoenix, AZ 85076
   (480) 626-5946
   pkahn@engineeringarts.com
   www.engineeringarts.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 09
County: Maricopa

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43GM108126-01
Start Date: 5/1/14    Completed: 10/31/15
Phase I year
2014
Phase I Amount
$149,800
Engineering Arts (EA) proposes the development of a detachable nozzle piezoelectric dispense system for use in Cryo-TEM (Cold - Transmission Electron Microscopy) sample preparation instrumentation. Cryo-TEM is an important tool for studying the structure of biological macromolecules in their native aqueous state. The challenging and laborious process of preparing 'thin-ice' frozen aqueous samples for Cryo-TEM has remained essentially unchanged for decades. Typically a single aqueous biological sample (~3¿l) is manually applied onto a thin porous Electron Microscopy (EM) grid which is then blotted to remove excess sample and then plunged into liquid-ethane for flash freezing. This process hopefully leaves enough regions on the grid with the proper vitrified 'thin-ice', typically 50 to 200nm thickness, required for EM imaging. The detachable piezoelectric nozzle dispense system proposed here is a key innovation that will lead to productivity, quality and capability breakthroughs for Cryo-TEM workflow. The following key benifits for Cryo-TEM process will be realized: 1. Apply many different samples (or sample conditions) to each Cryo-TEM grid. 2. Increase process control and yields of acceptable thin-ice over current standard blotting methods. 3. Lower starting sample volume requirements and consumption per grid. 4. Allow time-resolved study of mixing / binding events of multiple samples. EA will design, fabricate and optimize a multichannel detachable nozzle piezoelectric dispense system that is capable of dispensing droplets (less than 50 picoliters) of several different biological samples (or sample conditions) onto each TEM grid. A three channel detachable nozzle piezoelectric dispense system retrofitted onto a custom Cryo-TEM sample preparation instrument (Spotiton instrument platform) at NRAMM (National Resource for Automated Molecular Microscopy, Scripps, La Jolla CA.) for testing, optimization and validation.

Public Health Relevance Statement:


Public Health Relevance:
In this grant, Engineering Arts proposes development of a tool that will allow scientists to more easily construct high resolution molecular models of proteins, viruses and other biological structures. Understanding life processes at the molecular level forms scientific foundations for understanding disease leading to potential diagnostics and therapies including new drugs.

Project Terms:
abstracting; aqueous; Arts; base; Binding (Molecular Function); Biological; Biotechnology; Buffers; Caliber; college; commercial application; commercialization; Communities; Consumption; Cucumber (Vegetable); Custom; design; Development; Diagnostic; Disease; Electron Microscopy; Electronics; Engineering; Ethane; Event; Flow Cytometry; Foundations; Freezing; Grant; Head; Ice; Image; improved; innovation; insight; instrument; instrumentation; interest; Lead; Legal patent; Letters; Licensing; Life; Lipids; Liquid substance; macromolecule; Methods; Microscopy; Microtubules; Molecular; molecular modeling; Molecular Models; nanoimaging; nanomaterials; nanoparticle; Nanotechnology; Nanotubes; Necrosis; open source; Performance; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Pharmacologic Substance; Phase; Preparation; Process; Productivity; prototype; public health relevance; Pump; Research; Research Infrastructure; Research Institute; Resolution; Resources; Sales; Sampling; scale up; Scientist; Services; Specimen; Structure; success; Syringes; System; technological innovation; technology development; Testing; Thick; Time; time use; tool; Transmission Electron Microscopy; Validation; Viral Proteins; Virus; Work

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
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Phase II Amount
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