CA2317695A1 - Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes - Google Patents

Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2317695A1
CA2317695A1 CA002317695A CA2317695A CA2317695A1 CA 2317695 A1 CA2317695 A1 CA 2317695A1 CA 002317695 A CA002317695 A CA 002317695A CA 2317695 A CA2317695 A CA 2317695A CA 2317695 A1 CA2317695 A1 CA 2317695A1
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
polynucleotides
population
tag
dna
microparticles
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
CA002317695A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Glen Albrecht
Sydney Brenner
Robert Dubridge
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Lynx Therapeutics Inc
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of CA2317695A1 publication Critical patent/CA2317695A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6813Hybridisation assays
    • C12Q1/6834Enzymatic or biochemical coupling of nucleic acids to a solid phase
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N15/00Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
    • C12N15/10Processes for the isolation, preparation or purification of DNA or RNA
    • C12N15/1096Processes for the isolation, preparation or purification of DNA or RNA cDNA Synthesis; Subtracted cDNA library construction, e.g. RT, RT-PCR
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6809Methods for determination or identification of nucleic acids involving differential detection

Abstract

The invention provides a method and materials for monitoring and isolating differentially expressed genes. In accordance with the method of the invention, differently labeled populations of DNAs from sources to be compared are competitively hybridized with reference DNA cloned on solid phase supports, e.g. microparticles, to provide a differential expression library which, in the preferred embodiment, may be manipulated by fluorescenceactivated cell sorting (FACS). Monitoring the relative signal intensity of the different fluorescent labels on the microparticles permits quantitative analysis of expression levels relative to the reference DNA. The invention also provides a method for identifying and isolating rare genes. Populations of microparticles having relative signal intensities of interest can be isolated by FACS and the attached DNAs identified by sequencing, such as with massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS), or with conventional DNA sequencing protocols.

Description

This is a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No.
09/130,446 filed b August 1998, which is a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S.
patent application Ser. No. 091005,222 filed 9 January 1998, which applications are incorporated by reference.
The invention relates generally to methods for identifying differentially expressed genes, and more particularly, to a method of competitively hybridizing differentially expressed DNAs with reference DNA sequences cloned on solid phase supports to provide a differential expression library which can be physically manipulated, e.g. by fluorescence-activated flow sorting.
The desire to decode the human genome and to understand the genetic basis of disease and a host of other physiological states associated differential gene expression has been a key driving force in the development of improved methods for analyzing and sequencing DNA, Adams et al., Editors, Automated DNA Sequencing and Analysis (Academic Press, New York, 1994). The human genome is estimated to contain about 1 OS genes, 15-30% of which--or about 20-40 megabases--are active in any given tissue. Such large numbers of expressed genes make it difficult to track changes in expression patterns by available techniques, especially in view of the large number of genes that are expressed at relative low levels: It has been estimated that as much as 30% of mRNA consists of many thousands of distinct species each making up less than 0.5% of the total, and typically averaging less than 14 copies per cell, Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning, Second Edition (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York, 1989). Even substantial changes in expression among such low abundance mRNAs can be difficult to detect in the presence overwhelming quantities of abundant sequences.
A variety of techniques are available for analyzing gene expression that differ widely in convenience, expense, and sensitivity. Commonly used low resolution SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) 2C'. ~._.. __. _.~IyCNE~ 02 : a- '~- 0 : 3:?p : +6FOE3~570bG3-r +49 89 2~,~~, ""r. ", n 05-02-2~00:21pm Fron-GOOLET fiODYIARD +6508570663 T-382 P.10l33 US 009900666 techniques include differential display, indexitzg, subtraction hybridization, and numerous DNA fingerprinting techt>igues, e.g. Vos et al., Nucleic Acids Research, ?3:
4407-4414 ( 1995); liubank et al., Nucleic Acids Acseareh, 22: 5640-5648 (1994);
Lingo et al., Science, 257: 967-971 (I992); Erlander et al., International patent publication W095113369; McClcllaad et al., U.S. patent 5,437,975; Uarau et al., Gee, I45: 163-t69 (1994); and the like. Higher resolution techniques include analysis of expressed sequence tags (SSTs), e.g. Adams et al. (cited above);
analysts of concatenated fragments of expressed sequences (SAGE), e.g. Velculcscu et al., Science, 270: 484-486 (1995 Zhang et al., Science, 276: 12b8-1?72 (1997);
Vclculescu ct al., Cdl, 8$: 243-251 (1997); and the use of mitcroarrays of oligouucleotides or polyaucleotides for capturing complctztcntary polyrtucleotides from expressed genes, c.g. Scheax Gt sl., Science, 270: 4b7-469 (1995); AcRisi et al., Science, 278: 680-686 (199?); Chee et al., Science, 274: 614-514 (1996); and the like.
The latter two high resolution techniques have shown promise as poieatially robust systems foe analysing gene exp;esaioa; however, these a=e still technical issues that need to be addressed with both approaches. in trurmarray systems, genes to bC
monitorod must be knows and isolated befarehatad, which means different iuicroasrays, or "DNA chips," have to be n>auufactutrd for each specialized use and far every different type of organism or species cxaruined. With =expect to ttticroarrays constructed from flmd-delivered cDNAs, a significant degree of variability, e.g. 2-5 fold, exists in the signals generatui under the sarrte hybtidi2ation conditions, AtlasTM
cDNA &xpression System Users Mutual (Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto,1998), and the systems are not readily ra-usable. With respect to ttaicroarrays of synthetic oligopuckotides, a sigtuficant set-up cost for tnattufacttuiag such strays and expensive chip-reading instruments put such systems beyond the financial capability of many potctatial users. In sequence tag systems, although no special instturueatation is necessary, as an ractensive installed brio of DNA sequeacers rudy be used, even routine expression analysis requires a sigttificaat sequencing effort, e.g.
several thousand sequencing reactions oz more; the selection of type Its tag-generating enzymes ~s limited; and the length (nine nucleotides) of the sequence tag in current protocols severely limits the number of cDNAs that cart be uniquely labeled.
It can be shown that for organisms expressing large sets of genes, such as marnmalisn calls, the likelihood of ninte~nuc leotide tags being distinct for all expressed genes is extremely CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET
low, e.g. Feller, An Introduction to Probability Theory and Its Applications, Second Edition, Vol. I (John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1971 ).
It is clear from the above that there is a need for a convenient and sensitive technique for analyzing gene expression that permits the analysis of either known or unknown genes from any source. The availability of such a technique would find immediate application not only in medical and scientific research, but also in a host of applied fields, such as crop and livestock development, pest management, drug development, diagnostics, disease management, and the like.
SL1_M .M_A_R_Y OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, objects of our invention include, but are not limited to, providing a method for identifying and isolating differentially expressed genes;
providing a method of identifying and isolating polynucleotides on the basis of labels that generate different optical signals; providing a method for profiling gene expression of large numbers of genes simultaneously; providing a method of identifying and separating genes in accordance with whether their expression is increased or decrease under any given conditions; providing a method for identifying rare genes; and providing a method for massively parallel signature sequencing of large numbers of genes isolated according to their expression.
Our invention accomplishes these and other objects by providing differently labeled populations of polynucleotides from cell or tissue sources whose gene expression is to be compared. In comparing gene expression, differently labeled polynucleotides of a plurality of populations are competitively hybridized with reference DNA cloned on solid phase supports. Preferably, the solid phase supports are microparticles which, after such competitive hybridization, provide a differential expression library which may be manipulated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), or other sorting means responsive to optical signals generated by labeled polynucleotides on the microparticles. Monitoring the relative signal intensity of the different labels on the microparticles permits quantification of the relative expression of particular genes in the different populations.
In one aspect of the invention, populations of microparticles having relative signal intensities of interest are isolated by FACS and the attached polynucleotides are sequenced to determine the identities of the rare or differentially expressed genes.

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Preferably, the method of the invention is carried out by the following steps:
a) providing a reference population of nucleic acid sequences attached to separate solid phase supports in clonal subpopulations; b) providing a population of polynucleotides of expressed genes from each of the plurality of different cells or tissues, the polynucleotides of expressed genes from different cells or tissues having a different light-generating label; c) competitively hybridizing the populations of polynucleotides of expressed genes from each of the plurality of different cells or tissues with the reference population to form duplexes between the sequences of the reference population and polynucleotides of each of the different cells or tissues such that the polynucleotides are present in duplexes on each of the solid phase supports in ratios directly related to the relative expression of their corresponding genes in the different cells or tissues; and d) detecting a relative optical signal generated by the light-generating labels of the duplexes attached thereto. In further preference, the method includes the step of sorting each solid phase support according to the relative optical signal detected. Preferably, the reference population of nucleic acids is derived from genes of the plurality of different cells or tissues being analyzed. As used herein, the phrase "polynucleotides of expressed genes" is meant to include any RNA produced by transcription, including in particular mRNA, and DNA produced by reverse transcription of any RNA, including in particular cDNA produced by reverse transcription of mRNA.
The present invention overcomes shortcoming in the art by providing compositions, methods, and kits for separating and identifying genes that are differentially expressed without requiring any previous analysis or knowledge of the sequences. The invention also permits differentially regulated genes to be separated from unregulated genes for analysis, thereby eliminating the need to analyze large numbers of unregulated genes in order to obtain information on the genes of interest.
J~$IEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figures la and lb illustrate FACS analysis of microparticles loaded with competitively hybridized DNA strands labeled with two different fluorescent dyes.
Figure 2 is a schematic representation of a flow chamber and detection apparatus for observing a planar array of microparticles loaded with restriction fragments for sequencing.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Figure 3a illustrates a preferred scheme for converting isolated messenger RNA (mRNA) into cDNA and insertion of the cDNA into a tag-containing vector.
Figure 3b illustrates a preferred scheme for amplifying tag-cDNA conjugates out of a vector and loading the amplified conjugates onto microparticles.
Figure 3c illustrates a preferred scheme for isolating sorted cDNAs for cloning and sequencing.
Figure 4a and 4b illustrate alternative procedures for cloning differentially expressed cDNAs isolated by FACS sorting.
Figures Sa-a illustrate flow analysis data of microparticles carrying predetermined ratios of two differently labeled cDNAs.
Figure 6 illustrates flow analysis data of microparticles carrying differently labeled cDNAs from stimulated and unstimulated THP-1 cells.
Figure 7 illustrates flow analysis data of microparticles carrying labeled cDNAs derived from mRNA of low abundance in stimulated THP-1 cells.
Figure 8 illustrates flow analysis data of microparticles carrying labeled cDNAs derived from mRNA of low abundance in human bone marrow.
Figure 9 illustrates flow analysis data of microparticles carrying differently labeled cDNAs from glucose normal and glucose starved muscle tissue.
Figure l0A illustrates an embodiment of the invention for constructing a reference nucleic acid population on microparticles.
Figure lOB illustrates an embodiment for using the reference library of Figure l0A to compare gene expression of two cell populations.
CA o 2 317 6 9 5 2 0 0 0 - o ~ - 0 4 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) "Complement" or "tag complement" as used herein in reference to oligonucleotide tags refers to an oligonucleotide to which a oligonucleotide tag specifically hybridizes to form a perfectly matched duplex or triplex. In embodiments where specific hybridization results in a triplex, the oligonucleotide tag may be selected to be either double stranded or single stranded. Thus, where triplexes are formed, the term "complement" is meant to encompass either a double stranded complement of a single stranded oligonucleotide tag or a single stranded complement of a double stranded oligonucleotide tag.
The term "oligonucleotide" as used herein includes linear oligomers of natural or modified monomers or linkages, including deoxyribonucleosides, ribonucleosides, anomeric forms thereof, peptide nucleic acids (PNAs), and the like, capable of specifically binding to a target polynucleotide by way of a regular pattern of monomer-to-monomer interactions, such as Watson-Crick type of base pairing, base stacking, Hoogsteen or reverse Hoogsteen types of base pairing, or the like.
Usually monomers are linked by phosphodiester bonds or analogs thereof to form oligonucleotides ranging in size from a few monomeric units, e.g. 3-4, to several tens of monomeric units, e.g. 40-60. Whenever an oligonucleotide is represented by a sequence of letters, such as "ATGCCTG," it will be understood that the nucleotides are in S'~3' order from left to right and that "A" denotes deoxyadenosine, "C"
denotes deoxycytidine, "G" denotes deoxyguanosine, and "T" denotes thymidine, unless otherwise noted. Usually oligonucleotides of the invention comprise the four natural nucleotides; however, they may also comprise non-natural nucleotide analogs.
It is clear to those skilled in the art when oligonucleotides having natural or non-natural nucleotides may be employed, e.g. where processing by enzymes is called for, usually oligonucleotides consisting of natural nucleotides are required.
"Perfectly matched" in reference to a duplex means that the poly- or oligonucleotide strands making up the duplex form a double stranded structure with one other such that every nucleotide in each strand undergoes Watson-Crick basepairing with a nucleotide in the other strand. The tenor also comprehends the pairing of nucleoside analogs, such as deoxyinosine, nucleosides with 2-aminopurine bases, and the like, that may be employed. In reference to a triplex, the term means that the triplex consists of a perfectly matched duplex and a third strand in which CA o 2 3176 9 5 2 0 0 0 - o ~ - 0 4 SUBS~7TlJTE SHEET (RULE 26) every nucleotide undergoes Hoogsteen or reverse Hoogsteen association with a basepair of the perfectly matched duplex. Conversely, a "mismatch" in a duplex between a tag and an oligonucleotide means that a pair or triplet of nucleotides in the duplex or triplex fails to undergo Watson-Crick and/or Hoogsteen and/or reverse Hoogsteen bonding.
As used herein, "nucleoside" includes the natural nucleosides, including 2'-deoxy and 2'-hydroxyl forms, e.g. as described in Kornberg and Baker, DNA
Replication, 2nd Ed. (Freeman, San Francisco, 1992). "Analogs" in reference to nucleosides includes synthetic nucleosides having modified base moieties and/or modified sugar moieties, e.g. described by Scheit, Nucleotide Analogs (John Wiley, New York, 1980); LJhhnan and Peyman, Chemical Reviews, 90: 543-584 (1990), or the like, with the only proviso that they are capable of specific hybridization. Such analogs include synthetic nucleosides desired to enhance binding properties, reduce complexity, increase specificity, and the like.
As used herein "sequence determination" or "determining a nucleotide sequence" in reference to polynucleotides includes determination of partial as well as full sequence information of the polynucleotide. That is, the term includes sequence comparisons, fingerprinting, and like levels of information about a target polynucleotide, as well as the express identification and ordering of nucleosides, usually each nucleoside, in a target polynucleotide. The term also includes the determination of the identification, ordering, and locations of one, two, or three of the four types of nucleotides within a target polynucleotide. For example, in some embodiments sequence determination may be effected by identifying the ordering and locations of a single type of nucleotide, e.g. cytosines, within the target polynucleotide "CATCGC ..." so that its sequence is represented as a binary code, e.g.
"100101 ... " for "C-(not C)-(not C)-C-(not C)-C ... " and the like.
As used herein, the term "complexity" in reference to a population of polynucleotides means the number of different species of polynucleotide present in the population.
As used herein, the term "relative gene expression" or "relative expression"
in reference to a gene refers to the relative abundance of the same gene expression product, usually an mRNA, in different cells or tissue types.
7_ SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 28) tm i m.~m~r,~t~ 1 Y 11 N F T IN<»rrrn,.r The present invention provides compositions, methods, and kits for analyzing relative gene expression in a single or plurality of cell and/or tissue types that are of interest. The methods of the invention can be applied to polynucleotides derived from animals, plants, and microorganisms such as fungi, bacteria, mycoplasma, cyanobacteria, algae, and the like. Preferably, the polynucleotides are derived from animals, plants or microorganisms involved in fermentation process, with vertebrates and agricultural plants being most preferred. The plurality usually comprises a pair of cell or tissue types, such as a diseased tissue or cell type and a healthy tissue or cell type, or such as a cell or tissue type being subjected to a stimulus or stress, e.g. a change of nutrients, temperature, or the like, and the corresponding cell or tissue type in an unstressed or unstimulated state. In another embodiment, the plurality can comprise a pair of cell or tissue types having homologous genes, such as cells or tissue from different organisms. The plurality may also include more than two cell or tissue types, such as would be required in a comparison of expression patterns of the same cell or tissue over time, e.g. liver cells after exposure of an organism to a candidate drug, organ cells of a test animal at different developmental states, and the like. Preferably, the plurality is 2 or 3 cell or tissue types; and more preferably, it is 2 cell or tissue types.
The method of the invention typically comprises providing a reference population of nucleic acid sequences attached to separate solid phase supports in clonal subpopulations, providing at least one population of polynucleotides of expressed genes, hybridizing the populations) of polynucleotides of expressed genes with the reference nucleic acid population, and detecting, and preferably sorting each solid phase support according to a relative optical signal generated by the duplexes attached thereto.
Figure l0A illustrates an embodiment of the invention for constructing a reference nucleic acid population on microparticles, and Figure lOB
illustrates an embodiment for using such a reference library to compare gene expression of two cell populations. Messenger RNA (mRNA) is extracted (1004) from cell populations (1000) and (1002) using conventional protocols to give two populations of polynucleotides (1006) and (1008), respectively. The extraction reactions can be carried out separately or on a mixture of cell types. Preferably, the reactions are _g_ SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) carried out separately so that the relative quantities of mRNA from the two populations can be more readily controlled. Portions of mRNA (1006) and mRNA
(1008) are combined (1010) and cDNA library (1012) is constructed in vectors carrying a repertoire of oligonucleotide tags, in accordance with the procedure S described in Brenner et al., U.S. patent 5,846,719. Preferably, equal portions of mRNA, i.e., equal molar quantities, are taken from each population of mRNA. A
sample of vectors from library (1012) is taken and amplified, e.g. by polymerase chain reaction, transfection and cloning, or the like, after which the tag-cDNA
conjugates (1014) carried by the vectors are excised or copied (1011) and then isolated. Loaded microparticles are then formed and prepared for use in competitive hybridization as follows (1018). The isolated tag-cDNA conjugates (1014), illustrated with oligonucleotide tags a, b, c, and d, are specifically hybridized to microparticles carrying their tag complements a', b', c', and d' (1016), respectively. The tag-cDNA
conjugates are ligated to tag complements so that at least one strand of the double stranded tag-cDNA conjugate is covalently attached to the microparticle.
Microparticles carrying tag-cDNA conjugates are separated from those that do not carry tag-cDNA conjugates, preferably using a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS), or like instrument. The non-covalently attached strand is melted off and separated from the microparticles to yield microparticles (1020) carrying a reference nucleic acid population.
As illustrated in Figure lOb, gene expression of cells (1050) may be compared to that of cells (1052) by separately extracting (1054) mRNA (1056) and (1058) from each cell type. After construction of cDNA libraries (1062) and (1064) using conventional protocols, single stranded nucleic acid probes are generated from the respective cDNA populations (1062) and (1064), the probes preferably being labeled with optically distinguishable fluorescent dyes F (1068) and R (1066), e.g., rhodamine and fluorescein. Equal amounts of the labeled polynucleotides are mixed and hybridized (1072) to the complementary strands carried by the microparticles to form duplexes (1074). After the hybridization is complete, microparticles carrying the duplexes thereby formed ( 1074) can be sorted ( 1076) in accordance to predetermined criteria, such as fluorescence ratio, fluorescence intensity, and/or the like.
In such a manner, subpopulations of interest can be isolated and further analyzed, e.g., those corresponding to up-regulated or down-regulated genes.

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) For analysis in accordance with the invention, messenger RNA (mRNA) is extracted from the cells or tissues of interest using conventional protocols, as disclosed in, for example, Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 2nd Edition (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York). Preferably, the populations of mRNAs to be compared are converted into populations of labeled cDNAs by reverse transcription in the presence of a labeled nucleoside triphosphate using conventional protocols, e.g. Schena et al., Science 270: 467-470 (1995);
DeRisi et al., Science 278: 680-686 (1997); or the like, prior to hybridization to a reference DNA
population.
An important feature of the invention is that the genes whose expression levels change or are different than those of the other cells or tissues being examined may be analyzed separately from those that are not regulated or otherwise altered in response to whatever stress or condition is being studied. As described below, in the preferred embodiment gene products from the cells or tissues of interest are competitively hybridized with a reference population consisting of DNA sequences attached in clonal subpopulations to separate microparticles. As a result, microparticles carrying labeled gene products in ratios indicating differential expression may be manipulated and analyzed separately from those carrying labeled gene products in ratios indicating no change in expression, e.g. "house-keeping" genes, genes encoding structural proteins, or the like.
Another important feature of the invention is that the identity of the nucleic acid being analyzed, e.g., genomic DNA or gene products such as cDNA, mRNA, RNA transcript, or the like, need not be known prior to analysis. After relative expression is determined, cDNAs derived from expressed genes may be identified by direct sequencing on the solid phase support, preferably a microparticle, using a number of different sequencing approaches. For identification, only a portion of the cDNAs need be sequenced. In many cases, the portion may be as small as nine or ten nucleotides, e.g. Velculescu et al. (cited above}. Preferably, entire subpopulations of differentially expressed genes are sequenced simultaneously using MPSS, or a similar parallel analysis technique. In a preferred embodiment, this is conveniently accomplished by providing a reference population of DNA sequences such that each such sequence is attached to a separate microparticle in a clonal subpopulation. As used herein, the phrase "clonal subpopulation" refers to multiple copies of a single SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) kind of polynucleotide selected from a population of interest, such as a cDNA
library constructed from mRNA extracted from a cell or tissue whose gene expression is being analyzed. Such clonal subpopulations may be formed in a number of ways, including by separate amplification of a poynucleotide and attacment by conventional attachment chemistries, e.g., Hermansen, Bioconjugate Techniques (Academic Press, New York, i 996). As explained more fully below, clonal subpopulations are preferably formed by so-called "solid phase cloning" disclosed in Brenner, U.S.
patent 5,604,097 and Brenner et al., U.S. patent 5,846,719, which are incorporated herein by reference. Briefly, such clonal subpopulations are formed by hybridizing an amplified sample of tag-DNA conjugates onto one or more solid phase support(s), e.g., separate and unconnected microparticles, so that individual microparticles, or different regions of a larger support, have attached multiple copies of the same DNA.
The DNA component of the tag-DNA conjugate can be cDNA, genonuc DNA, a fragment of cDNA or genomic DNA, or a synthetic DNA, such as, for example, an oligonucleotide. Preferably the tag-DNA conjugate is a cDNA or a fragment of genomic DNA ("gDNA"). The number of copies of a cDNA or gDNA in a clonal subpopulation may vary widely in different embodiments depending on several factors, including the density of tag complements on the solid phase supports, the size and composition of micmparticle used, the duration of hybridization reaction, the complexity of the tag repertoire, the concentration of individual tags, the tag-DNA
sample size, the labeling means for generating optical signals, the particle sorting means, signal detection system, and the like.
Guidance for making design choices relating to these factors is readily available in the literature on flow cytometry, fluorescence microscopy, molecular biology, hybridization technology, and related disciplines, as represented by the references cited herein. Preferably, the number of copies of a cDNA or a gDNA
in a clonal subpopulation is sufficient to permit FACS detection and/or sorting of microparticles, wherein fluorescent signals are generated by one or more fluorescent dye molecules carried by the cDNAs attached to the microparticles. Typically, this number can be as low as a few thousand, e.g. 3,000-5,000, when a fluorescent molecule such as fluorescein is used, and as low as several hundred, e.g. 800-8000, when a rhodamine dye, such as rhodamine 6G, is used. More preferably, when loaded microparticles are detected andlor sorted by FACS or like instruments, clonal SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B~

subpopulations consist of at least 104 copies of a cDNA or gDNA; and most preferably, in such embodiments, clonal subpopulations consist of at least 105 copies of a cDNA or gDNA.
Labeled cDNAs or RNAs from the cells or tissues to be compared are competitively hybridized to the DNA sequences of the reference DNA population using conventional hybridization conditions, e.g. such as disclosed in Schena et al.
(cited above); DeRisi et al. (cited above); or Shalon, Ph.D. Thesis entitled "DNA
Microarrays," Stanford University (1995). After hybridization, an optical signal is generated by each of the two labeled species of cDNAs or RNAs so that a relative optical signal is determined for each micmparticle. Preferably, such optical signals are generated and measured in a fluorescence activated cell sorter, or like instrument, which permits tire nu~!'~p~cles to be sorted and accumulated whose relative optical signal fall with a predetermined ra:'~.Le of values. The microparticles loaded with cDNAs or RNAs generating relative optical signals in the desired range may be isolated and identified by sequencing, such as with MPSS, as described more fully below.
Preferably, clonal subpopulations of cDNAs or other DNA molecules derived from RNA are attached to microparticles using the processes illustrated in Figures 3a and 3b. First, as illustrated in Figure 3a, mRNA (300) is extracted from a cell or tissue source of interest using conventional techniques and is converted into cDNA
(309) with ends appropriate for inserting into vector (316). Preferably, primer (302) having a 5' biotin (305) and poly(dT) region (306) is annealed to mRNA strands (300) so that the first strand of cDNA (309) is synthesized with a reverse transcriptase in the presence of the four deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates. Preferably, 5-methyldeoxycytidine triphosphate is used in place of deoxycytosine triphosphate in the first strand synthesis, so that cDNA (309) is hemi-methylated, except for the region corresponding to primer (302). This allows primer (302) to contain a non-methylated restriction site for releasing the cDNA from a support. The use of biotin in primer (302) is not critical to the invention and other molecular capture techniques, or moieties, can be used, e.g. triplex capture, or the like. Region (303) of primer (302) preferably contains a sequence of nucleotides that results in the formation of restriction site rz (304) upon synthesis of the second strand of cDNA (309).
After isolation by binding the biotinylated cDNAs to streptavidin supports, e.g.
Dynabeads CA 0 2 317 6 9 5 2 0 0 0 - 0 7 - 0 4 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26j .. __. .~~yNCiiCN O'? ' 3: ~op : +65UBS7UGE:3-. ;.g.J O~ ~ .._._ . _ __ 05-02-2000 ~ z 1 am F r om-coo~ET coowRRO '~
+6509520863 T~3BT P.11/33 US 009900666 ~~~'~& M-280 (Dyt>a1. Cklo, Norway), or thr Iike, eDNA (349) is preferably cleaved with a restriction endonucltase which is insensitive to hemitnethyl~ion (of the C's) and which recognixrs site rr (307). Preferably, r, is a four-base recognition sue, e.g, corre~spondutg to Dpn 11, oc like en2yme, which ensures that substantially all of the cDNAs are cleaved snd that the same defined end is produced ~ ~1 of the cDNAs. After washing. the cDNAs are then cleaved with a restriction trulvnuclease recognizing rz. releasing fragment (308) which is putifled using standard techniques, e.g. ethanol precipitation, polyacrylatnide gel eleetrophomis, or the Iilce_ A~
-resuspending in an appropriate buffer, fragment (308) is directiopally Iigatrd into t 0 vector (31 b), which carries tag (310) and a cloning site with ends (3 I2) snd (314).
Preferably, vector (316) is prepared with a "stuifer~' fragment in the cloning aitc to aid in the isolation of a Rllly cleaved vector for cloning.
Prs=potation of the tag-cDNA conjugates is not limited to the method described above and can readily be achieved in a variety of ways using conventional molecular biology Techniques. For example, cpNA can be prepared by conveucional m~ads and isolated by gel electrophoresis. This method is less preferred sa part because it would bias the size distribution of the rcfcrrncc population. The tag can be attached by ligation of adaptors, by PCR with an otigo dT primer and a random primer, or by RACE technology ($ertiiag et al. (1993) PCR Methods Appl.' 3.95-93; Frn, M.A. (1993) MethodsEnrymal. X18:344.356; Marathons CDNA Amplification Kit, Clontech i,aboratories, Inc.). Attachment of the tag by clonins into a vector, as described above, is preferred for several reasons, including the ability to generate large quantities of the refcrcncc population (versus RACE, which typically yields only pg quantities), and the ability to check the sequence of the tag.
?5 After formation of a library of tag-cDNA conjugates, a sataple of host calls is usually pl&ted to deterrrtine the ttuutber cfrecoaibinauu per unit volume of culture nnediurrl. ?'hc size of sample taken for further processing preferably depaads on tht size of tag repertoire used in the library construction. As taught by Brenner a al., U.S. patent 5,84b,719 and J3reruter et at., U.S. patent 5,6fl4,097, a satnplc preferably iactudes a number of co>~jugates equivalent to about one perreut the size of the tag repertoire in ordtr to taitumize the selection of "doublas," i.e. two or snore conjugates carrying the same tag and different cDNAs. Thus, for a tag repertoire consisting of a concatenation of night 4-nucleotide "words" selected from, a mitzimalty cross-hybridizing set of eight words, the size of the repertoire is 8g, or about 1.7 x 10' tags.
Accordingly, with such a repertoire, a sample of about 1.7 x 105 conjugate-containing vectors is preferably selected for amplification and further processing as illustrated in Figure 3b.
Preferably, tag-cDNA conjugates are carried in vector (330) which comprises the following sequence of elements: first primer binding site (332), restriction site r3 (334), oligonucleotide tag (336), junction (338), cDNA (340), restriction site r4 (342), and second primer binding site (344). After a sample is taken of the vectors containing tag-cDNA conjugates the following steps are implemented: The tag-cDNA conjugates are preferably amplified from vector (330) by use of biotinylated primer (348) and labeled primer (346) in a conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in the presence of 5-methyldeoxycytidine triphosphate, after which the resulting amplicon is isolated by streptavidin capture. Restriction site r3 preferably corresponds to a rare-cutting restriction endonuclease, such as Pac I, Not I, Fse I, Pme I, Swa I, or the like, which permits the captured amplicon to be release firom a support with minimal probability of cleavage occurnng at a site internal to the cDNA
of the amplicon. Junction (338) which is illustrated as the sequence:
5'... GGGCCC ...
3'... CCCGGG ...
causes the DNA polymerase "stripping" reaction to be halted at the G triplet, when an appropriate DNA polymerase is used with dGTP. Briefly, in the "stripping"
reaction, the 3'->5' exonuclease activity of a DNA polymerase, preferably T4 DNA
polymerase, is used to render the tag of the tag-cDNA conjugate single stranded, as taught by Brenner, U.S. patent 5,604,097; and Kuijper et al., Gene, 112: 147-(1992). In the preferred embodiment where sorting is accomplished by formation of duplexes between tags and tag complements, tags of tag-cDNA conjugates are rendered single stranded by first selecting words that contain only three of the four natural nucleotides, and then by preferentially digesting the three nucleotide types from the tag-cDNA conjugate in the 3'--~5' direction with the 3'~5' exonuclease activity of a DNA polymerase. In the preferred embodiment, oligonucleotide tags are designed to contain only A's, G's, and T's; thus, tag complements (including that in the SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) double stranded tag-cDNA conjugate) consist of only A's, C's, and T's. When the released tag-cDNA conjugates are treated with T4 DNA polymerise in the presence of dGTP, the complementary strands of the tags are "stripped" away to the first G. At that point, the incorporation of dG by the DNA polymerise balances the exonuclease activity of the DNA polymerise, effectively halting the "stripping" reaction.
From the above description, it is clear that one of ordinary skill could make many alternative design choices for carrying out the same objective, i.e. rendering the tags single stranded. Such choices could include selection of different enzymes, different compositions of words making up the tags, and the like.
When the "stripping" reaction is quenched, the result is duplex (356) with single stranded tag (357). After isolation, steps (358) are implemented: the tag-cDNA conjugates are hybridized to tag complements attached to microparticles, a fill-in reaction is carried out to fill any gap between the complementary strand of the tag-cDNA conjugate and the 5' end of tag complement (362) attached to micmparticle (360), and the complementary strand of the tag-cDNA conjugate is covalently bonded to the 5' end (363) of tag complement (362) by treating with a ligase. This embodiment requires, of course, that the 5' end of the tag complement be phosphorylated, e.g. by a kinase, such as, T4 polynucleotide kinase, or the like. The fill-in reaction is preferably carried out because the "stripping" reaction does not always halt at the first G. Preferably, the fill-in reaction uses a DNA
polymerise lacking 5'~3' exonuclease activity and strand displacement activity, such as polymerise. Also preferably, all four dNTPs are used in the fill-in reaction, in case the "stripping" extended beyond the G triplet.
As explained further below, the tag-cDNA conjugates are hybridized to the full repertoire of tag complements. That is, among the population of microparticles, there are microparticles having every tag sequence of the entire repertoire.
Thus, the tag-cDNA conjugates will hybridize to tag complements on only about one percent of the microparticles. Microparticles to which tag-cDNA have been hybridized are referred to herein as "loaded microparticles." For greater efficiency, loaded microparticles are preferably separated from unloaded microparticles for further processing. Such separation is conveniently accomplished by use of a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS), or similar instrument that permits rapid manipulation and sorting of large numbers of individual microparticles. In the embodiment SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) illustrated in Figure 3b, a fluorescent label, e.g. FAM (a fluorescein derivative, Haugland, Handbook of Fluorescent Probes and Research Chemicals, Sixth Edition, (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR, 1996)) is attached by way of primer (346).
The tag-cDNA can be attached to the tag complement on the microparticles by a procedure omitting or modifying many of the steps discussed above. For example, instead of amplifying the tag-cDNA from vector (330), the tag-cDNA can be cleaved from the vector by restriction digest, stripped, and ligated directly to the tag complement on the microparticles. This procedure omits (1) labeling the tag-cDNA
with biotin and FAM, (2) amplifying the tag-cDNA, and (3) isolating the amplicon by streptavidin capture. If desired, loaded microparticles can be isolated by hybridizing with a FAM-labeled primer.
As shown in Figure 3c, after FACS, or like sorting (380), loaded microparticles (360) are isolated, treated to remove label (345), and treated to melt off the non-covalentiy attached strand. Label (345) is removed or inactivated so that it does not interfer with the labels of the competitively hybridized strands.
Preferably, the tag-cDNA conjugates are treated with a restriction endonuclease recognizing site r, {342) which cleaves the tag-cDNA conjugates adjacent to primer binding site (344), thereby removing label (345) carried by the "bottom" strand, i.e. the strand have its 5' end distal to the microparticle. Preferably, this cleavage results in microparticle (360) with double stranded tag-cDNA conjugate (384) having protruding strand (385).
3'-labeled adaptor (386) is then annealed and ligated to protruding strand (385), after which the loaded microparticles are re-sorted by means of the 3'-label and the strand carrying the 3'-label is melted off to leave a covalently attached single strand of the cDNA (392) ready to accept denatured cDNAs or mRNAs from differentially expressed genes. Preferably, the 3'-labeled strand is melted off with sodium hydroxide treatment, or treatment with like reagent.
Clonal subpopulations of gDNAs can be attached to microparticles in a similar manner. First, genomic DNA is isolated from a cell or tissue source of interest using conventional techniques and is cleaved with at least one restriction endonuclease, which preferably cleaves at a four-base recognition, such as, for example, Dpn II, Sau3A I, Aci I, Alu I, Bfa I, BstU I, Hae III, Hha I, HinPl I, Hpa II, Mbo I, Mse I, Msp I, Nla III, Rsa I, Taq°' I, Tsp 509 I, and the like. Preferably, the cleaved fragment has an overhang of at least one base. Alternatively, genomic DNA fragments can be SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) prepared by shearing or sonicating the isolated genomic DNA. The tag can then be linked to the gDNA in a number of ways, including random primed PCR with primers containing the tag sequence or cloning into a vector containing a tag in a manner similar to that described above for a cDNA reference population. A label such as FAM can be attached in order to monitor the loading of the micmparticles. In some instances, directional attachment onto the microparticles can be achieved by amplifying the gDNA with a primer having a consensus sequence, such as, for example, the TATA box, or a sequence complementary to a consensus sequence.
When using a gDNA reference population for evaluating gene expression, it may be desirable to reduce noncoding sequence and introns in the gDNA library. For example, a large gDNA library of about 60 x 106 microparticles can be reduced to about 30,000-40,000 by culling, using cDNA pools as a probe.
An important feature of the invention is the use of oligonucleotide tags which are members of a minimally cross-hybridizing set of oligonucleotides to construct reference DNA populations attached to solid phase supports, preferably microparticles. The sequences of oligonucleotides of a minimally cross-hybridizing set differ from the sequences of every other member of the same set by at least two nucleotides. Thus, each member of such a set cannot form a duplex (or triplex) with the complement of any other member with less than two mismatches. Complements of oligonucleotide tags, referred to herein as "tag complements," may comprise natural nucleotides or non-natural nucleotide analogs. When oligonucleotide tags are used for sorting, as is the case for constructing a reference DNA population, tag complements are preferably attached to solid phase supports. Oligonucleotide tags when used with their corresponding tag complements provide a means of enhancing specificity of hybridization for sorting, tracking, or labeling molecules, especially polynucleotides, such as cDNAs or rnRNAs derived from expressed genes:
Minimally cross-hybridizing sets of oligonucleotide tags and tag complements may be synthesized either combinatorially or individually depending on the size of the set desired and the degree to which cross-hybridization is sought to be minimized (or stated another way, the degree to which specificity is sought to be enhanced).
For example, a minimally cross-hybridizing set may consist of a set of individually SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) synthesized 10-mer sequences that differ from each other by at least 4 nucleotides, such set having a maximum size of 332, when constructed as disclosed in Brenner et al., U.S. patent 5,604,097. Alternatively, a minimally cross-hybridizing set of oligonucleotide tags may also be assembled combinatorially from subunits which themselves are selected from a minimally cross-hybridizing set. For example, a set of minimally cross-hybridizing 12-mers differing from one another by at least three nucleotides may be synthesized by assembling 3 subunits selected from a set of minimally cross-hybridizing 4-mers that each differ from one another by three nucleotides. Such an embodiment gives a maximally sized set of 93, or 729, 12-mers.
ZO When synthesized combinatorially, an oligonucleotide tag can be randomized at individual positions along its length. Preferably, however, the oligonucleotide tag consists of a plurality of subunits, each subunit consisting of an oligonucleotide of 3 to 9 nucleotides in length wherein each subunit is selected from the same minimally cross-hybridizing set. In such embodiments, the number of oligonucleotide tags available depends on the number of subunits per tag and on the length of the subunits.
An oligonucleotide tag can also consist of a plurality of subunits with additional nucleotides on either terminus of the oligonucleotide. The additional nucleotides can be random and/or can comprise a restriction site. Such a structure ensures the instability of a duplex or triplex having a mismatch at a terminus of the oligonucleotide. Preferably, the oligonucleotide comprises a recognition site for a rare-cutting restriction endonuclease on at least one end. In a preferred embodiment, the oligonucleotide comprises an AT-rich restriction site, such as a Pac I
site, on one end. A Bsp120 site is a preferred site on the other end.
Complements of oligonucleotide tags attached to one or more solid phase supports are used to sort polynucleotides from a mixture of polynucleotides each containing a tag. Such tag complements are synthesized on the surface of a solid phase support, such as a bead, preferably microscopic, or a specific location on an array of synthesis locations on a single support, such that populations of identical, or substantially identical, sequences are produced in specific regions. That is, the surface of each support, in the case of a bead, or of each region, in the case of an array, is derivatized by copies of only one type of tag complement having a particular sequence. The population of such beads or regions contains a repertoire of tag complements each with distinct sequences. As used herein in reference to SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) oligonucleotide tags and tag complements, the term "repertoire" means the total number of different oligonucleotide tags or tag complements that are employed for solid phase cloning (sorting) or identification. A repertoire may consist of a set of minimally cross-hybridizing set of oligonucleotides that are individually synthesized, or it may consist of a concatenation of oligonucleotides each selected from the same set of minimally cross-hybridizing oligonucleotides. In the latter case, the repertoire is preferably synthesized combinatorially.
Preferably, tag complements are synthesized combinatorially on microparticles, so that each microparticle has attached many copies of the same tag complement. A wide variety of microparticle supports may be used with the invention, including microparticles made of controlled pore glass (CPG), highly cross-linked polystyrene, acrylic copolymers, cellulose, nylon, dextran, latex, polyacrolein, anti u~e 1_ike, disclosed in the following exemplary references:
Meth.
Enzymol., Section A, pages 11-14i, Col. 44 (Academic Press, New York, 1976);
U.S.
patents 4,678,814; 4,413,070; and 4,046;720; and Pon, Chapter 19, in Agrawal, editor, Methods in Molecular Biology, VoI. 20, (Humane Press, Totowa, NJ, 1993).
Microparticle supports further include commercially available nucleoside-derivatized CPG and polystyrene beads (e.g. available from PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA); derivatized magnetic beads; polystyrene grafted with polyethylene glycol (e.g., TentaGelTM, Rapp Polymere, Tubingen Germany); and the like. Microparticles may also consist of dendrimeric structures, such as disclosed by Nilsen et al., U.S. patent 5,175,270. Generally, the size and shape of a microparticle is not critical;
however, microparticles in the size range of a few, e.g. 1-2, to several hundred, e.g.

p,m diameter are preferable, as they facilitate the construction and manipulation of large repertoires of oligonucleotide tags with minimal reagent and sample usage.
Preferably, glycidal methacrylate (GMA) beads available from Bangs Laboratories (Carmel, III are used as microparticles in the invention. Such microparticles are useful in a variety of sizes and are available with a variety of linkage groups for synthesizing tags and/or tag complements. More preferably, 5 pm diameter GMA
beads are employed.
In a preferred embodiment, polynucleotides to be sorted, or cloned onto a solid phase support, each have an oligonucleotide tag attached, such that different polynucleotides have different tags. This condition is achieved by employing a SUBSTITUTE SHEET iRU~E 26) RC'.. ...,......'.. ~~LEi~CHEnI U1 ~- 2- n ; 3 : y 1 : +EiSU857U563-. +49 89 ~~,n~,. .. r.c . .. .., 05-02-2000 ~Z~Pn Fraa-GOOI~1 WDWARD +6508570663 7-382 P.IZ/33 ~JS 009900666 repertoire of ugs substantially greater than the population of poiynuclcotides and by taking a suf~cmntly small sample of tagged polynuclcotides from tix full ensetnblc of lagged polynucleotidrs. After such sampling, when the populations of supports and potynucleotides are mixed under conditions which permit specific hybridizaticrt of the oligonucleotide tags with their trspeetive coruplernents, identical po!ynuclzotides sort onto particular beads or regions. Of course, she sampled tag-polynucleotidc conjugates are preferably amplified, e.g. by polyrnerasc chain reaction, cloning in a plasmid, Itlv'A transcription, or the like, to providt sufficient rnatcriaI
for subsequent analysis.
4ligonucleotide tags are employed for two diffaeat purposes in crttain embodixrleats of the invention: oligonucleotide tags are employed to itnpltment solid phase cloning, as described in 8ranuct, U.S. patent 5,604,097; 8rid In tccttational pattnt publication W096~41011, wherein largo ntambers of po!ynuclcotidcs, e.g.
several thousand to stveral hundred thousand, arc sorted from a rnixtttr~ into clonal l5 subpopulatians of identical polyaucleotides on one or naorc solid phase supporGS for analysis, and they arc employed to deliver (or accept) labels to Identify polynucleotides, such as encadod adaptors, that number in the t~aagr of a few tens to a few thousand, eg. ss disclosed in Albrecht et al., International patent publication W097/46704. For the former use, large numbers, or repertoires, of tags are typically required, and thesefnrc synthesis of individual oligonucleotide tags is difFcult. In these embodiments, combinatorial synthesis of the tags is preferred. On the other hand, where exareruely large repertoires of tags are not reduired-such as for delivering labels to a plurality of kinds or subpopulatiotzs of palynucieotidcs in the range of 2 to a few tccr~s, e.g encodod adaptors, oligottucleoude tags of a minimally 35 cress-hybridizing sec may be separately synthesized, as well as synthesized cotnbinatorially.
Sets containing swtr-dl huadrcd to several thousands, or evctt several tens of thousands, of oligonuclrotidcs tray be synthesized directly by a variety of parallel synthrais approaches, e.g as disclosed in Frank ct al., I3.S. patcat 4,689,4()5; Fraul: et al., Nucleic Acids R:cscarch, 11: 43b5-4377119$3); Matron et al., Anal.
Biochetn., ??4= 114-116 (1995); Fodor et al., LtttcrttarionaJ publication W093I22684;
Peace et al., Proc. Natl. Aced. Sci., 91: 5022-X026 (1994); Southern et al., J.
Biotechnology, LV -CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

R~... _._.. __. ..~lENCHEN O? ~ :~- 2- O : 3:21 : +GS08S7UEtiJ-. +4J 89 -~~"~.~...~......
05-02-2000 ~22pm FrwrC00LE1 GODWARO +6508570663 T-361 P.13/33 US 009900666 35: 217-227 (1994), Brrnnan, Lateruational publication WQ94/27719; Lash&ari et al., Proc. Natl. Aced. Sci., 92: 7912-79j5 (1995); err the like.
preferably, tag complements in mixtures, whether sy~nchesized combinatorially err individually, arc selected to have sirtzilar duplex or triplex stabilities tp one another so that perfectly matched hybrids have similar or substantially identical melting temperatures. This prrrnics mis-matched tag corttplerrlcnts to be more readily distinguished fxoiu perfectly matched tag complements in the bybridizatioa steps, e.g:
by washing under sirutgent conditions. For combinacorially synthaizad tag complements, minimally cross-hybridizing sets ttiay be consttuct.ed front subunits that rnakc approxirrlately equivalent contributions to duplac stability as every other subuzsit in the set. Guidance for carrying out such selecriaus is provided by published teclmigucs for scicctirtg optimal PC'1~ primers atld calculating duplex stabilities, e.g.
Rychlik ct al., Nucleic Acids Research, 17: SS43-8551 (1989) and 18: b409~412 {1990); 8res1$uer et al., proc. Nail. Aced. Sci., 83: 3746-375U (19$b);
w'etmur, Crit.
) S Rcv. $iochem. Mol. Hiol., 26: 227-259 ( 1991 ); and the like. A
niixtimally cross-hybridizing set of oligonucleotides can be screened by additional criteria, such as GC-content, distcibutioa of utismatches, theoretical melting tempe~a~ure, and the like, to farirj. a subset which is also a minimally cross-hybridizing set.
The oligortuclootide tags of the inveuuoa and their complements are convrnirntly syathesixed on an automated DNA synthesizer, eg. an Applied Hiosysterus, lne. (Fostrr City, California) model 392 or 394 DNAlRNA
Synthesi2er, using standard chemistries, such as phosphoramidite chemistry, e.~ disclosed in the fohewing references: Beauca~e and Iyer, Tetrahedron, 48: 2223-2311 (1992);
Molko tt al., U.S. patent 4,980,4b0; I~.oster et al., LT_S. patent 4,725,677;
Caruthers et al., U.S. patents 4,415,732; 4,458,066; and 4,973,679; and the like.
Oligonucleotide tags for sorting may range is length from 12 to 60 nucleotides or basepairs. Preferably, oligonucieotide tags range in length from 18 to 40 nucleotides or basepairs. More preferably, oligoaucleotidc tags range in length from 25 to 40 nucleotides or basepairs. Ia farms of preferred and more preferred nurabcrs 21 .
CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

of subunits, these ranges may be expressed as follows:
Nu_m__bers of Subu-nits in Tags in Preferred Embodimen_ls Monomers j~,$~~ Nuct_eotides in Oligonucleotide Tag ( 12-60) ( 18-40) (25-40) 3 4-20 subunits 6-13 subunits 8-13 subunits 4 3-15 subunits 4-10 subunits 6-10 subunits 2-12 subunits 3-8 subunits 5-8 subunits 6 2-10 subunits 3-6 subunits 4-6 subunits Most preferably, oligonucleotide tags for sorting are single stranded and specific 5 hybridization occurs via Watson-Crick pairing with a tag complement.
Preferably, repertoires of single stranded oligonucleotide tags for sorting contain at least 100 members; more preferably, repertoires of such tags contain at least 1000 members; and most preferably, repertoires of such tags contain at least 10,000 members.
Preferably, the length of single stranded tag complements for delivering labels is between 8 and 20. More preferably, the length is between 9 and 15.
In embodiments where specific hybridization occurs via triplex formation, coding of tag sequences follows the same principles as for duplex-forming tags;
however, there are further constraints on the selection of subunit sequences.
Generally, third strand association via Hoogsteen type of binding is most stable along homopyrimidine-homopurine tracks in a double stranded target. Usually, base triplets form in T-A*T or C-G*C motifs (where "-" indicates Watson-Crick pairing and "*"
indicates Hoogsteen type of binding); however, other motifs are also possible.
For example, Hoogsteen base pairing permits parallel and antiparallel orientations between the third strand (the Hoogsteen strand) and the purine-rich strand of the duplex to which the third strand binds, depending on conditions and the composition of the strands. There is extensive guidance in the literature for selecting appropriate sequences, orientation, conditions, nucleoside type (e.g. whether ribose or deoxyribose nucleosides are employed), base modifications (e.g. methylated cytosine, and the like) in order to maximize, or otherwise regulate, triplex stability as desired in particular embodiments. Conditions for annealing single-stranded or duplex tags to CA o 2 317 6 9 5 2 0 0 0 - o ~ - 0 4 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) their single-stranded or duplex complements are well known, e.g. Ji et al., Anal.
Chem. 65: 1323-1328 (1993); Cantor et al., U.S. patent 5,482,836; and the like. Use of triplex tags in sorting has the advantage of not requiring a "stripping"
reaction with polymerase to expose the tag for annealing to its complement.
An exemplary tag library for sorting is shown below (SEQ ID NO: 1).
Left Primer Bsp L20I
5'-AGAATTCGGGCCTTAATTAA ~.
5'-AGAATTCGGGCCTTAATTAA- [4(A,G,T)e] -GGGCCC-T~CCCGG- 14(T,C,A)8] -CCCGGG-T T
Eco RI Pac I
Bbs T Bam HI
-GCATAAGTCTTCXXX ... XXXGGATCCGAGTGAT -3' -CGTATT~~XXX ... XXX,~,~CTCACTA
XXXXXCCTAGGCTCACT
A-5' Right Primer Formula I
The flanking regions of the oligonucleotide tag may be engineered to contain restriction sites, as exemplified above, for convenient insertion into and excision from cloning vectors. Optionally, the right or left primers may be synthesized with a biotin attached (using conventional reagents, e.g. available from Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA) to facilitate purification after amplification and/or cleavage.
Preferably, for making tag-fragment conjugates, the above library is inserted into a conventional cloning vector, such a pUCl9, or the like. Optionally, the vector containing the tag library may contain a "stuffer" region, "XXX ... XXX," which facilitates isolation of fragments fully digested with, for example, Bam HI and Bbs I.
An important aspect of the invention is the sorting and attachment of populations of DNA sequences, e.g. from a cDNA library, to microparticles or to SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) separate regions on a solid phase support such that each microparticle or region has substantially only one kind of sequence attached; that is, such that the DNA
sequences are present in clonal subpopulations. This objective is accomplished by insuring that substantially all different DNA sequences have different tags attached. This condition, in turn, is brought about by taking only a sample of the full ensemble of tag-DNA
sequence conjugates for analysis. (It is acceptable that identical DNA
sequences have different tags, as it merely results in the same DNA sequence being operated on or analyzed twice.) Such sampling can be carried out either overtly--for example, by taking a small volume from a larger mixture--after the tags have been attached to the DNA sequences; it can be carried out inherently as a secondary effect of the techniques used to process the DNA sequences and tags; or sampling can be carried out both overtly and as an inherent part of processing steps.
If a sample of n tag-DNA sequence conjugates are randomly drawn from a reaction mixture--as could be effected by taking a sample volume, the probability of drawing conjugates having the same tag is described by the Poisson distribution, P(r)=e'"(~,)'/~, where r is the number of conjugates having the same tag and ~,=np, where p is the probability of a given tag being selected. If n=106 and p=1/(1.67 x 10') (for example, if eight 4-base words described in Brenner et al. were employed as tags), then ~,=.0149 and P(2~1.13 x 10'x. Thus, a sample of one million molecules gives rise to an expected number of doubles well within the preferred range.
Such a sample is readily obtained by serial diiutions of a mixture containing tag-fragment conjugates.
As used herein, the term "substantially all" in reference to attaching tags to molecules, especially polynucleotides, is meant to reflect the statistical nature of the sampling procedure employed to obtain a population of tag-molecule conjugates essentially free of doubles. Preferably, at least ninety-five percent of the DNA
sequences have unique tags attached.
Preferably, DNA sequences are conjugated to oligonucleotide tags by inserting the sequences into a conventional cloning vector carrying a tag library. For example, cDNAs may be constructed having a Bsp 120 I site at their 5' ends and after digestion with Bsp 120 I and another enzyme such as Sau 3A or Dpn II may be directionally inserted into a pUC 19 carrying the tags of Formula I to form a tag-cDNA
library, which includes every possible tag-cDNA pairing. A sample is taken from this library SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) for amplification and sorting. Sampling may be accomplished by serial dilutions of the library, or by simply picking plasmid-containing bacterial hosts from colonies.
After amplification, the tag-cDNA conjugates may be excised from the plasmid.
After the oligonucleotide tags are prepared for specific hybridization, e.g.
by S rendering them single stranded as described above, the polynucleotides are mixed with microparticles containing the complementary sequences of the tags under conditions that favor the formation of perfectly matched duplexes between the tags and their complements. There is extensive guidance in the literature for creating these conditions. Exemplary references providing such guidance include Wetmur, Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 26: 227-259 (1991); Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 2nd Edition (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York, 1989); and the like. Preferably, the hybridization conditions are sufficiently stringent so that only perfectly matched sequences form stable duplexes. Under such conditions the polynucleotides specifically hybridized through their tags may be ligated to the complementary sequences attached to the microparticles. Finally, the microparticles are washed to remove polynucleotides with unligated and/or mismatched tags.
Specificity of the hybridizations of tag to their complements may be increased by taking a sufficiently small sample so that both a high percentage of tags in the sample are unique and the nearest neighbors of substantially all the tags in a sample differ by at least two words. This latter condition may be met by taking a sample that contains a number of tag-polynucleotide conjugates that is about 0.1 percent or less of the size of the repertoire being employed. For example, if tags are constructed with eight words a repertoire of 88, or about 1.67 x 107, tags and tag complements are produced. In a library of tag-DNA sequence conjugates as described above, a 0.1 percent sample means that about 16,700 different tags are present. If this were loaded directly onto a repertoire-equivalent of microparticles, or in this example a sample of 1.67 x 107 microparticles, then only a sparse subset of the sampled microparticles would be loaded. Preferably, loaded microparticles may be separated from unloaded microparticles by a fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) instrument using conventional protocols after DNA sequences have been fluorescently labeled and denatured. After loading and FACS sorting, the label may be cleaved prior use or other analysis of the attached DNA sequences.

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) A reference DNA population may consist of any set of DNA sequences whose fi~equencies in different test populations is sought to be compared.
Preferably, a reference DNA population for use in the analysis of gene expression in a plurality of cells or tissues is constructed by generating a cDNA library firm each of the cells or tissues whose gene expression is being compared. This may be accomplished either by pooling the mRNA extracted firm the various cells and/or tissues, or it may be accomplished by pooling the cDNAs of separately constructed cDNA libraries.
Alternatively, a reference DNA population may be constructed finm genomic DNA.
The objective is to obtain a set of DNA sequences that will include all of the sequences that could possibly be expressed in any of the cells or tissues being analyzed. Once the DNA sequences making up a reference DNA population are obtained, they must be conjugated with oligonucleotide tags for solid phase cloning.
Preferably, the DNA sequences are prepared so that they can be inserted into a vector carrying an appropriate tag repertoire, as described above, to form a library of tag-DNA sequence conjugates. A sample of conjugates is taken from this library, amplified, and loaded onto microparticles. It is important that the sample be large enough so that there is a high probability that all of the different types of DNA
sequences are represented on the loaded microparticles. For example, if among a plurality of cells being compared a total of about 25,000 genes are expressed, then a sample of about five-fold this number, or about 125,000 tag-DNA sequence conjugates, should be taken to ensure that all possible DNA sequences will be represented among the loaded microparticles with about a 99% probability, e.g.
Sambrook et al. (cited above).
In another embodiment, the reference population can comprise a set of polynucleotides encoding a specific set or sets of proteins selected from the group consisting of cell cycle proteins, signal transduction pathway proteins, oncogene gene products, tumor suppressors, kinases, phosphatases, transcription factors, growth factor receptors, growth factors, extracellular matrix proteins, proteases, cytoskeletal proteins, membrane receptors, Rb pathway proteins, p53 pathway proteins, proteins involved in metabolism, proteins involved in cellular responses to stress, cytokines, proteins involved in DNA damage and repair, and proteins involved in apoptosis.
Such polynucleotides are typically attached to the solid phase supports through oligonucleotides having a unique sequence per solid support, but such polynucleotides SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) can also be attached to the solid phase supports through an oligonucleotide with a sequence common for each solid phase support, such as, for example a polyadenylated oligonucleotide.
Preferably, after the tag-DNA sequence conjugates are sampled, they are amplified by PCR using a fluorescently labeled primer to provide sufficient material to load onto the tag complements of the microparticles and to provide a means for distinguishing loaded from unloaded microparticles, as disclosed in Brenner et al.
(cited above). Preferably, the PCR primer also contains a sequence which allows the generation of a restriction site of a rare-cutting restriction endonuclease, such as Pac I, in the double stranded product so that the fluorescent label may be cleave from the end of the cDNA prior to the competitive hybridization of labeled DNA strands derived from ells or tissue being studied. After such loading, the specifically hybridized tag-DNA sequence conjugates afe ugai~: to the tag complements and the loaded microparticles are separated from the unloaded microparticles by FACS.
The fluorescent label is cleaved from the DNA strands of the loaded microparticles and the non-covalently attached strand is removed by denaturing with heat, formamide, NaOH, and/or with like means, using conventional protocols. The microparticles are then ready for competitive hybridization.
Competitive Hybridization a_rd Light-Generating abets Gene expression products, e.g. mRNA or cDNA, from the cells and/or tissues being analyzed are isolated. The expression products are labeled so as to distinguish the source. Preferably, the products from each source comprise a label different from the label comprised by the products of any other source, e.g., each having a unique and distinguishable emission frequency. Alternatively, the product of one source can be left unlabeled. The expression products can be labeled by conventional techniques, e.g. DeRisi et al. (cited above), or the like. Preferably, a light-generating label is incorporated into cDNAs reverse transcribed from the extracted rnRNA, or an oligonucleotide tag is attached for providing a labeled tag complement for identification. A large number of light-generating labels are available, including fluorescent, colorimetric, chemiluminescent, and electroluminescent labels.
Generally, such labels produce an optical signal which may comprise an absorption frequency, an emission frequency, an intensity, a signal lifetime, or a combination of SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) such characteristics. Preferably, fluorescent labels are employed, either by direct incorporation of fluorescently labeled nucleoside triphosphates or by indirect application by incorporation of a capture moiety, such as biotinylated nucleoside triphosphates or an oligonucleotide tag, followed by complexing with a moiety capable of generating a fluorescent signal, such as a streptavidin-fluorescent dye conjugate or a fluorescently labeled tag complement. Preferably, the optical signal detected from a fluorescent label is an intensity at one or more characteristic emission frequencies. Selection of fluorescent dyes and means for attaching or incorporating them into DNA strands is well known, e.g. DeRisi et al. (cited above), Matthews et al., Anal. Biochem., Vol 169, pgs. 1-25 (1988); Haugland, Handbook of Fluorescent Probes and Research Chemicals (Molecular Probes, Inc., Eugene, 1992); Keller and Manak, DNA Probes, 2nd Edition (Stockton Press, New York, 1993); and Eckstein, editor, Oligonucleotides and Analogues: A Practical Approach (IRL Press, Oxford, 1991); Wetmur, Critical Reviews in Biochelriistry and Molecular Biology, 26:

259 (1991); Ju et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 92: 4347-4351 (1995) and Ju et al., Nature M~icine, 2: 246-249 ( 1996); and the like.
Preferably, light-generating labels are selected so that their respective optical signals can be related to the quantity of labeled DNA strands present and so that the optical signals generated by different light-generating labels can be compared.
Measurement of the emission intensities of fluorescent labels is the preferred means of meeting this design objective. For a given selection of fluorescent dyes, relating their emission intensities to the respective quantities of labeled DNA strands requires consideration of several factors, including fluorescent emission maxima of the different dyes, quantum yields, emission bandwidths, absorption maxima, absorption bandwidths, nature of excitation light source(s), and the like. Guidance for making fluorescent intensity measurements and for relating them to quantities of analytes is available in the literature relating to chemical and molecular analysis, e.g.
Guilbault, editor, Practical Fluorescence, Second Edition (Marcel Dekker, New York, 1990);
Pesce et al., editors, Fluorescence Spectroscopy (Marcel Dekker, New York, 1971 );
White et al., Fluorescence Analysis: A Practical Approach (Marcel Dekker, New York, 1970); and the like. As used herein, the term "relative optical signal"
means a ratio of signals from different light-generating labels that can be related to a ratio of differently labeled DNA strands of identical, or substantially identical, sequences that SU9STITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) form duplexes with a complementary reference DNA strand. Preferably, a relative optical signal is a ratio of fluorescence intensities of two or more different fluorescent dyes.
Competitive hybridization between the labeled DNA strands derived from the plurality of cells or tissues is carried out by applying equal quantities of the labeled DNA strands from each such source to the microparticles loaded with the reference DNA population in a conventional hybridization reaction. The particular amounts of labeled DNA strands added to the competitive hybridization reaction vary widely depending on the embodiment of the invention. Factors influencing the selection of such amounts include the quantity of microparticles used, the type of microparticles used, the loading of reference DNA strands on the microparticles, the complexity of the populations of labeled DNA strands, and the like. Hybridization is competitive in that differently labeled DNA strands with identical, or substantially identical, sequences compete to hybridize to the same complementary reference DNA
strands.
The competitive hybridization conditions are selected so that the proportion of labeled DNA strands forming duplexes with complementary reference DNA strands reflects, and preferably is directly proportional to, the amount of that DNA strand in its population in comparison with the amount of the competing DNA strands of identical sequence in their respective populations. Thus, if a first and second differently labeled DNA strands with identical sequence are competing for hybridization with a complementary reference DNA straV~1 such that the first labeled DNA strand is at a concentration of 1 ng/p,l and the second labeled DNA strand is at a concentration of 2 ng/pl, then at equilibrium it is expected that one third of the duplexes formed with the reference DNA would include first labeled DNA strands and two thirds of the duplexes would include second labeled DNA strands. Guidance for selecting hybridization conditions is provided in many references, including Keller and Manak, (cited above); Wetmur, (cited above); Hames et al., editors, Nucleic Acid Hybridization: A Practical Approach (IRL Press, Oxford, 1985); and the like.
Another aspect of the invention is a kit for analyzing differentially expressed genes, comprising a mixture of microparticles, each microparticle having a population of identical single stranded nucleic acid molecules attached thereto, the single stranded nucleic acid molecules being different on each microparticle and comprising a polynucleotide derived from an mRNA of at least one cell or tissue source.

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) Preferably, each of said nucleic acid molecules further comprises an oligonucleotide tag in juxtaposition with said polynucleotide and positioned between said microparticle and said polynucleotide. The kit can further comprise a population of cDNA molecules from at least one of said cell or tissue sources, reagents for labeling the cDNA populations, reagents for performing competitive hybridization, and the like. If desired, the cDNA molecules in the kit are provided in fluorescently labeled form. The kit can contain additional components for performing competitive hybridization, such as, for example, hybridization buffers, PCR buffers and standards, and the like. The kit can further comprise at least one container or several containers for each of the components and can comprise printed instructions for use in analyzing differentially expressed genes.
The invention also provides a kit for preparing a reference population, comprising a plurality of micmparticles having oligonucleotide tag complements attached thereto, the oligonucleotide tag complement sequence being different on each microparticle. The kit can further comprise a plurality of vectors comprising a library of tags having sequences complementary to the tag complements. The kit can further comprise a population of polynucleotides from at least one cell or tissue source, preferably cDNAs. When a population of polynucleotides is included, preferably the population of polynucleotides is contained in a container separate from said plurality of microparticles. The kit can also contain reagents for preparing the reference population, such as, for example, adaptors, labels, polymerase, dNTP's, labelled dNTP's, PCR buffers, and the like, as well as printed instructions for preparing the reference population.
Flow Sorting of Microna_rr_icles with jig ~Ia ed After labeled polynucleotides are competitively hybridized to a reference population on microparticles, the microparticles may be analyzed and/or sorted in a number of ways depending on the chemical and/or physical properties of the microparticles and the attached sequences. For example, micmparticles of interest may be mechanically separated by micro-manipulators, magnetic microparticles may be sorted by adjusting or manipulating magnetic fields, charged microparticles may be manipulated by electrophoresis, or the like. The following references provide SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) guidance for selecting means for analyzing and/or sorting micmparticles: Pace, U.S.
Patent 4,908,112; Saur et al., U.S. Patent 4,710,472; Senyei et al., U.S.
Patent 4,230,685; Wilding et al., U.S. Patent 5,637,469; Penniman et al., U.S. Patent 4,661,225; Kamaukhov et al., U.S. Patent 4,354,1 I4; Abbott et al., U.S.
Patent 5,104,791; Gavin et al., PCT publication WO 97/40383; and the like.
Preferably, microparticles containing fluorescently labeled DNA strands are conveniently classified and sorted by a commercially available FACS instrument, e.g. Van Dilla et al., Flow Cytometry: Instrumentation and Data Analysis (Academic Press, New York, 1985); Fulwyler et al., U.S. Patent 3,710,933; Gray et al., U.S. Patent 4,361,400; Dolbeare et al., U.S. Patent 4,812,394; and the like. For fluorescently labeled DNA strands competitively hybridized to a reference strand, preferably the FACS instrument has multiple fluorescent channel capabilities. Preferably, upon excitation with one or more high intensity light sources, such as a Laser, a mercury arc lamp, or the like, each microparticle will generate fluorescent signals, usually fluorescence intensities, related to the quantity of labeled DNA strands from each cell or tissue types carried by the microparticle. As shown in Figure 1 a of Example 1, when fluorescent intensities of each microparticle are plotted on a two-dimensional graph, microparticles indicating equal expression levels will be on or near the diagonal (100) of the graph. Up-regulated and down-regulated genes will appear in the off diagonal regions (112). Such microparticles are readily sorted by commercial FACS instruments by graphically defining sorting parameters to enclose one or both off diagonal regions (112) as shown in Figure lb. Thus, microparticles can be sorted according to their relative optical signal, and if desired, collected for further analysis by accumulating those microparticles generating a signal within a predetermined range of values corresponding to a difference in gene expression among the different cell or tissue sources.
Microparticles containing fluorescently labeled DNA strands can also be classified and sorted according to the abundance of the gene products from which they are derived. The abundance of a nucleic acid sequence can be determined by the methods described above for determining relative gene expression and can be SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) correlated with the level of intensity of the optical signal generated by the polynucleotides bound to the microparticles. A lower intensity is indicative of a rarer nucleic acid sequence, such as a rare gene product. Rare genes are genes encoding an mRNA which is present in about 100 copies per cell or less, with increasing preference for less than about 50 copies to less than about 25 copies, with less than about 10 copies per cell being most preferred. Rare genes can be isolated by collecting microparticles with low fluorescent intensities as shown in Examples 9 and 10. The collected microparticles typically comprise less than about 5% of the total micmparticles, with increasing preference for less than about 2.5%, 1 %, to 0.5% with less than about 0.1 % being most preferred.
Alternatively, since hybridization rates are proportionate to the abundance of a nucleic acid sequence, less abundant nucleic acid sequences can be isolated by setting the hybridization conditions such that nucleic acid sequences present in a lower abundance in a cell or tissue source remain uuiiyb::d-~ze~l. Suitable hybridization conditions include those conditions used for producing normalized cDNA
libraries (Patanjali et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 88:1943-1947 (1991)). For example, rare genes can be isolated by collecting unhybridized DNA after allowing a maximum period of time for hybridization of the abundant DNA species.
Repetitive sequences can often complicate the mapping and analysis of polymorphisms. Repetitive sequences exist due to the presence in the genome of transposons, retrotransposons, retroviruses, short interspersed repetitive elements (SINEs) such as Alu sequences, satellite DNA, minisatellite DNA, megasatellite DNA, and the like. Repetitive sequences can be removed from a DNA population as described above by sorting rapidly hybridizing DNA species away from DNA
species that are slower to hybridize. Preferably, the unhybridized population is substantially enriched in polynucleotides derived from non-repetitive nucleic acid sequences.
Another aspect of the invention is a kit for analyzing and/or isolating nucleic acid sequences with respect to their abundance comprising microparticles prepared as described above and printed instructions for use.

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) R~-_..:. _. . _.._ . - ~yENCHEN O'~ : 5- 3- U : 3 : 21 : +b5(1f1570E~E~3-. +49 89 ~ ~~~" ~ ~~ . .. . .
05-02-2000 ~~ZP~ FroerC00LE1 GODwARD +6508570663 T-3HZ P.14/3; ["JS 009900666 j~~tcation o~ 5~,, t n c by M ~iv Iv P~lt~l SLg~D~re S
Expressed genes cosy be identified in parallel by MPSS, which is a S combination of two teehniducs: one for tagging and sorting fragnacuts of DNA
for parallel processing (r.g. arenncr et al., International pu6lic;ation W096I41011), and another for the stepwise sequencing the end of a DNA fragment (e.g. Brenner, U
S.
patent 5,599,675 and Albrecht ct al., Irtttrnational patent publication Wo97/46704).
After an initial digestion of a target polyaucleotidc with a fast restriction 1 Q endonuclease, restrictiosa fragments arc ligated to oligonucleotide tags as described below, arid irz Breaaa et al., International publication W09bI41011, so that the resulting tag-lfagttaeat conjugates rnay be sampled, amplified, and sorted onto separate solid phase supports by specific hybridization of the oligonucleotide tags with their tag complements.
1 S once an amplified sample of DNA fragments is sorted oruo solid phase supporcs to form hornogeaeous populations of substantially identical fragc~e~nts, the ends of the fragments are preferably sequenced with an adaptor-based method of DNA sequencing that includes repeated cycles of Iigation, identification, and cleavage, such as the method described in Brenner, U.S. patent 5,599,675. Iu further 20 preference, adaptors used in the sequencing method each have a protruding strand and an oligonucleotidc tag selected from a minimally cross-hybridizing set of oligonucleotides, as taught by Albrecbt cc al., Iate~rtt.~oual patent publication W097J467U4. Such adaptors are referred to herein as "decoded adaptors: ' Encoded adaptors whose protruding strands form perfectly rzzatchcd duplexes with the ? 5 complerneatary protruding strands of a fragraent are legated. ARer ligarioil, the identity and ordering of the nucleotides is the protruding strand is detertniaed, or "decoded," by specifically hybridizing a labeled tag complement, or "de-code:"
to its correspondtag tag on the legated ad$ptar_ The preferred sequencing rrsethod is carried out with the following steps: (a) 30 legating an encoded .adaptor to au end of a fragtnetrt, the encoded adaptor having a nuclease recognition site of a nuclease whose cleavage site is separate fmm its recognition site; (b) identifying one or morn nucleotides at the end of the fragment by the idcntiry of the encoded adaptor legated thereto; (c) cleaving the fragment with a CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

ZC' ~ _. _. . __. _ . -., ~SNCHEN 02 : 5- 2- U : ~i : p2 : +Ei5085 r U6fi3-.
+Q.y 8d '2~~ ~~~ ~ ,.~ . ~" r-05-02-2000 ~~ZPm From-COOItY GrJU~IARD +6508570663 T-38Z P.15/33 DS 009900666 nuclease recognizing the ntttlcasc recognition site of the encoded adaptar such That the fragment is shortened by one or more nucleotides; arid (d) repeating said sups (a) tt~to~sgh [c) until said nucleotide scQuence of tha tnd of the fragtneat is determined.
In the identification step, successive sets of tag compkracnts, or °de-coders," are spccif rally hybridi2ed to the respective tags carried by encoded adaptors ligattd to the ends of the fragments. The type arid sequence ofnucleotides in the protruding sa~ands of the polynucleotides are identified by the label carried by the specifically hybridised d~-caller and the set from which the de-coder carne, as desczibed below.
1 o L.~lti~S~rl. ~n of ~ .a. ~cne~s h c_anv ~9~~~~,s~
Gone products carried by micraparticles may be ideratificd after sorting, e.g.
by FRCS, using coavetJponal DNA sequencing protocols. Suitable templates for such sccluencing rxtay be gctterated in. several different ways starting from the sorted tnicropatticles carrying differentially expressed gene products. For examgle, the reference DNA attached to as isolated micropatucle may be used to generate labeled extension products by cycle saqu.encing, e.g. as taught by Brenner, International pubGr.~tian Wd96112039_ In this etnbadiraertt, primer binding site (400) is engineered into the reference DNA (402) distal to tag cornplcmerrt (406), as sbowrt is Figure 4a. After isolating a micropaiticle, e.g. by sorting into separate micraticer well, or the Iike, the differentially expressed strands arc tneited off, primer (404) is added, and a conventional Sanger sequencing reaction is carried out so that labeled extension products arc formed. These products are then separated by electrophoresis, or like techniques, for seduence determination. as a similar eiabodiurent, sequcrtcing templates may be produced without sorti:ig individual rnicroparcicles. Primer binding ZS sires (400) sad (420) may be used to generate templates by PCR using pz>m~
(404) and (422). The resulting amplicons containing the templates are then cloned into a conventional sequencing vector, such as M13. After transfection, hosts are placed and individual clones are selected for soquenciug.
In another embodiment, illusasttd tn Figure 4b, primer bindiAg site (412) rtfay be ea ;ineered into the competitively hybridized strands (410). This site need not have a complementary strand iu the reference DNA (403). After coning.
eornpecicively hybridized strands (410) are melted off of reference DNA (402) and amplified, e.g. by PCR, using priracrs (414) sad (416), which may be labeled sadJor dcrivatized with CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

. .. _.. _..... ..~~E;NCI IE.v 01 : 5- 2- 0 : 3 : 22 : +fi;:~08570663~ +49 8:) '1''M~.. ~ ac . ", a 05-02-2000 :T3Pm FroarC~OLEr GODriARD +65085i0663 T-38i P.16/33 US 009900666 b~oun for easier manipulation. The melted and amplified strands arc then cloned into a coaventional scrluencing vector, such as M13, which is used to transfect a host which, irs turn, is plated. Individual colonies are packed for sequencing.
~xaasple 1 rone_tr,~Steon o F a Tagged eDNA l,~ibra~ am lin and In this example, a preferred protocol for preparing tagged reference DNA for loading onto mtcroparticles is described. Briefly, cDNA &orn cacti of the celE
or tissue types of interest is prepared cad directionally clonal into a vector contaviniag the tag clement of Formula I. preferably, the mRNA extracted >xom such cells nr tissues is combined, usually in equal proportions, prior to first stzaud synthesis.
tnRNA is obtained using standard protocols, after which first and secoad sirarxf synxhesirs a ca<ried cut as cxcar<plified and the resultitt..g cDNAs are iascrtcd into a vector coataming a tag eleraeat of Formula I, or like tag elcmeat. The vectors ' containing the tag-cDNA conjugates arc then used to a~ansfona a suicabk host, typically a conventional bacterial host, after which a scruple of cells from the host culture is fusilier expanded attd vector DNA is extracted. The tag-cDNA
canjttgates arc preferably amplified from the vecto><s by PCR and processed as dexctibai below 24 For loading oato tnicmparticles derivatized with tag complements. .After the noa-covalently attached strand is taelted off, the cUNA-contaiiling aiicroparticl~.s are ready to accept cornpctitively hybridized gene products in accordance with the inveution_ Specr~c guidaace relating to the iadicaccd stops is available in Sarubrook et al. (cited above); Ausbel et al., editors, Current Protocols in Molecular Biology (John Wilcy & Sons, New York, 1995; and like guides on raolccuiat biology techniques.
A pellet of approximately 5 yrg of mRNA is resu.spenddd in 45 trl (fiaal volume) of a fast strand pre-mix consisting of 1~ ~1 Sx SUPFR.SCR1PT bu~'er (254 mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.3, 375 mM KCI, and 15 mM MgCl2) (GIBCflIaRL) (or tiiGe 3Q reverse transcriptase buffer), 5 ~d 4.1 M dithiotlucitol (DTT), 2.5 ~13dNTPlmethyl-dCTP Crux (lU pM each ofdATP, dGfP, dTTP, and 5-methyl-dCTP, a.g available from Pharmacia Biotech), 1 ~1 RNasin, 12 pl 0.25 trgltsl of reverse transc~ptiott primer shown below, and 1 ~.5 ~l H30.

CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

kC" . .... , . ...~ . ..~;ENCHEN p? : 5- '.'. - U : :3 : 'Z.' :
+(~50ti:~70fi63-. ~ 1~9 Ei9 :,''~c.c:n a as - ~ , w 05-42-2000 ~t3pe~ Fron-COOLEY I~DWARD +650b5TG6B3 T-38I P.1T/33 DS 009900666 5'-biotin GACATGCTGC ATTGAGACGATTCTTT'TTTTTTTTTTTI~'TTV
Rrverse Tcanscripdon Primer (SfiQ Ip NO: 2) s After incubation for 15 min at room tcrnperacure, 5 tn1 of 200 Ul~cl SLTPfiRSCRTPT is added and the mixture is incubated for 1 hr at 42°C_ After the 1 hr in~~ubation, the above mixture (about SO ~tt total) is added to a second-strand prerrtix on ica (volume 336 pI) consisting of 80 ~1 Sx second-strand buffer (94 mM'r"ris-Cl, pH 6.9, 453 raM
I~Ch 23 rciM MgCla, and 50 mM (Nk,y2SOg co give a total reactio» volurr<e of shout 386 ~1. Separately, 4 ~1 of 0.8 tlJ~sl RNasc H (3.2 orals) and IO ~l of 10 unitlN.1 E.
coli DNA polymera9e I (100 units) ate eotnbined and tha combined enzyme mixture is added to the above second-strand reaction mixture, aver which the total scsction volume is microfuged 5 sec and tben incubated for 1 hr at 16°C and for i hr at room temperaturz to give the folloazng double stranded cpNA (SEQ 1D N4: 3):
5 ~ -hiocin-GACA.'L~GCTOL~ . ' . XC~ATCxaCC-3 . . . XCTA~t-S
r r 30 8sm BI Dpa II
where ttte ms's indicated nucleotides in the cpNAs, V represents A, C, or G, and B
represents C, G, or T. Note that the averse transcription primer sequaica has been selected to give a $sm Bi site in the cIaNAs which results in a 5'-GOAT
ovethailg ?$ upon digestion with B~ BI.
After phenoUchloroform extraction and ecbanol precipitation, the cDNA is resesspended in the r~anuufaccure~s recomoaended buffer for digestion with I?pu 31 (New En$laud Biolabs, Beverely, MA), which is followed by capture of the biotinylated fragment op avidinated beads (Ay:ial, Oslo, Norway). After wasJuag, the 30 captured fraSments arc digester! with Bsm Hi to release the following cDNAs (SEQ
ID NO: 4) wroth are precipitated is ethanol:
GCATTGAGACc~ATTCTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTSlXXX . . . X -3 . ...... ....-,. ..~yCHEN Uu : 5- Z- a : :3:2;s : +6o0857Uh6,3-» ~4~ Hg 3~.--.... .
05-02-2000 ~Z4P~ Frort-COOLEY GUDYiARD +6508570663 T-38t P.18/33 US 009900686 A~~T~TAA '~X . . . XCTAG - 5 ' A conventional cloning vector, such as B~UESCRIPT LI, pBC, or the like (Stratagene Cloning Systems, La lolls, CA), is enginee~d to have the following seQuence of elements {SEQ iD NO: 5][which are those shown in Fotta.ula 1):
~~-...TTAATTAAGGA yTRGI GGGCCCGCATAAGTCTTC ~STfJFrERI
GGATCC...-3' 3'-...8$ZTAATTCCT~TAG~CCCGGC3CGTATT~STVFp$Rl ...-5~
Z T
Sac I Bbs I Bum FII
After digestion with Bbs I and Sam Hh the vector is puriftttl by gel electrophoresis and combined with the cDNAs for liga<iou. Note that the vector has been cagineetcd se that the labs 1 digcsdon results in as end compatible with the Bstzi Hi-digested end 2Q of the cDNAs. After ligation, a suitable host bacteria is transformed sad a culture is expanded for subscqu~ut use.
Frotn the expanded culture, a sample of host cells art plated to determine the fraction that carry vectors with inserted cDNAs, aRer which an aliquot of cuhtue correspandiug to about 1.7 x l Os insert-containing cells is withdrawn and separately ?S expanded is culture. This tcpresrnts about one percent of the repertoire of tags of the type illustrated is Formula I.
Preferably, the tag-cDNA conjugates are amplified out of the vectors by PCR
using a eonventianal protocol, such as the following. For each of 8 replicate PCRs, the following reaction components era combined: I ~! vector DNA (I25 tigl~cl for a 30 library, 109 copies for a single close); 10 ~cl l4x Kletltaq Buffer (Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto. CA); D.25 ~t biotiaylated 30-rner "forward" FCR
pritncr ( 1 nmoU~l); 0.25 ~I FAM-labeled 20-mer "reverse" PC>It primes (i nmoUpl); 1 pl 25 mM dAT'P, dGTP, dTT'P, and 5-rt~ethyl-dCTP (total dNTP concentration 100 mM);

wl DMSO; 2 pl SOx Klentaq as~xyme; and 80.5 pl H20 (for a total volume of 100 ~1).

CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

The PCR is run in an MJR DNA Engine (MJ Research), or like thermal cycler, with the following protocol: 1 ) 94°C for 4 min; 2) 94°C 30 sec; 3) 67°C 3 min; 4) 8 cycles of steps 2 and 3; S) 94°C 30 sec, 6) 64°C 3 min, 7) 22 cycles of steps 5 and 6; 8) 67°C
for 3 min; and 9) hold at 4°C.
The 8 PCR mixtures are pooled and 700 p,l phenol is added at room temperature, after which the combined mixture is vortexed for 20-30 sec and then centrifuged at high speed (e.g. 14,000 rpm in an Eppendorf bench top centrifuge, or like instrument) for 3 min. The supernatant is removed and combined with 700 ~1 chloroform (24:1 mixture of chloroform:iso-amyl alcohol) in a new tube, vortexed for 20-30 sec, and centrifuged for 1 min, after which the supernatant is transferred to a new tube and combined with 80 p,l 3M sodium acetate and 580 p,l isopropanol.
After centrifuging for 20 min, the supernatant is removed and 1 ml 70% ethanol is added.
The mixture is centrifuged for 5-10 min, after which the ethanol is removed and the precipitated DNA is dried in a speedvac.
After resuspension, the cDNA is purified on avidinated magnetic beads (Dynal) using the manufacturer's recommended protocol and digested with Pac I
(1 unit of enzyme per pg of DNA), also using the manufacturer's recommended protocol (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA). The cleaved DNA is extracted with phenol/chloroform followed by ethanol precipitation. The tags of the tag-cDNA
conjugates are rendered single stranded by combining 2 units of T4 DNA
polymerise (New England Biolabs) per p,g of streptavidin-purified DNA. 150 pg of streptavidin-purified DNA is resuspended in 200 pl H20 and combined with the following reaction components: 30 ~1 10 NEB Buffer No. 2 (New England Biolabs); 9 ~.1 100 mM
dGTP; 30 ltl T4 DNA polymerise (10 units/~1); and 31 p,l H20; to give a final reaction volume of 300 pl. After incubation for 1 hr at 37°C, the reaction is stopped by adding 20 pl 0.5 M EDTA, and the T4 DNA polymerise is inactivated by incubating the reaction mixture for 20 min at 75°C. The tag-cDNA
conjugates are purified by phenol/chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation.
S ~m GMA beads with tag complements are prepared by combinatorial synthesis on an automated DNA synthesizer (Gene Assembler Special /4 Primers, Pharmacia Biotech, Bjorkgatan, Sweden, or like instrument) using conventional phosphoramidite chemistry, wherein nucleotides are condensed in the 3'~5' direction.
In a preferred embodiment, a 28-nucleotide "spacer" sequence is synthesized, SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) tC JE:'s(a tE\ 0'~ : t5- 2- 0 : a3: 23 ~ +65085 066~3t36?UEi(;a3- T-382 4 P ~I
B 33 ~~,.,. . "~ . ., , "
05-02-2000:t4pm From-COOI.ET Wt7riARD , US 009900666 followed by the tag compl~t seQueace (8 "words" of 4 nucleotides each for a total of 32 nucleotides in the tag cotnplement~, and a sequence of three C's. Thus, the beads are denvati:ced with a b3-mer oligonucleotide. The length of the ''spacer"
sequancr is not critical; however, the proximity of the bead surface may affect the activity of enzymes thtst are use to treat tag complemctits or captured sequences.
Therefore, if such processing is employed. a spacer long enough to avoid such surface effects is desirable. Preferably, the spacer is between 10 and 30 nucleotides, incltasive. The following sequence (SEQ II) NO: b), containitsg a Par I site, is employed in the present erttboditttent:
lU
~ -CCC- lTag Complementl -TC~C"TGGTCTCACTGTCGCA->'ead T
Par I
Preferably, the tag-cDNA conjugates arc hybridized to tag cottsplim2nts oa beads of a number corresponding to at least a fitil repertoire of tag complettieats, which in the case of the presetst embodiment is SB, ar about ! .6 x 10' beads.
T'ha number of beads in a given volume is readily estimated with a hetnocytom.eter.
Prior to hybridization of the tag-cDNA conjugates, the S' ends of the tag cotnplcmcnts are phospborylatcd, preferably by trcatntau with a polynucleotide kinase. Briefly. 2.S x 10a beads suspended in 100 ~1 HzO are combined xith I
00 pI
lOx Iv~B buffer No. 2 (New England. 8iotabs, Beverly, MA), 10 Wl I00 mM ATP. 1 N.1 1U% TWlr~N 20, Z7 pi T4 polynucleotide kinase (10 unitslpi), and 772 ~1 HiO for a final volume of 1000 pl. After incubating for 2 hr at 37°C witb vortrxing, the temperature is increased to 65°C for 30 min to inactivate tht kinase, with couiintsed vortexiag. ARer incubation, the beads are washed twice by spinning down the beads and resuspeading them in 1 ml TE (Sambrook et al., Molecular Gloving, Second Edition, Cold Spring ~iarbor Laboratory) containing .Olio TWEEN 20.
For hybridizatio~a of tag-cDNA conjugates to tzg campletuents, the tag-cpNA
conjugates as prepared above arc suspended in 50 p.l HW ~.d the resulting mixture is combined with 40 ~] 2.Sx hybridi2ation bufifer, a&er which the combined mixture is filtered through a SPIN-X spits column (0.22 yam) using a coavencional protocol to give a filtrate containing the tag-cDNA conjugates. (5 tnl of the 2_5x hybridization CA 02317695 2000-0?-04 AMENDED SHEET

. . __ ,~E\CH~'v U2 ~ 5- ~- V ~ a='1:3 : +G5085706fi;i-. f-qy ~~
~~.........~....."
05-02-2000:~24om F~on-COOLEY G(J9WAR0 +8508570663 T-38t P.ZO/33 US 009900666 buffer carsists of I 25 ml 0.1 M NaP~,, (pH '7.2),1.25 ml 5 M NaCl, 0.25 tn1 U.a%
TW~EN 20, 1.50 tnl 25% dextran sulfate, and 0.7~ ail HzO.) Approxtrnately 1.8 x 10' beads in 10 ~l TFJ'TWEENbuffer (TE with .01% TWEEN 20) a centrifuged so that the be=ads form $ pellet and the T>rlTWEhN is removed- '1.'o the beads, 25 ~,I of lx hybcidtzatiort buffo ( 10 tnM NaP04 (pH 7.2), 300 mM NaCI, 0.01% T WEEN 20, 3% dextran sulfate) is added and the utixturc is vortexed to fully resuxpend the beads, after which the mixture is ccatrifitged sa that thr beads fornn a pellet and the supernatant is removal.
The tag-cpNA con,~ugatcs iri the about filtrate ate incubated at 75°C
foz 3 rain and combined with the beads, after which the atixtutr is vatte'rced to fully zesuspehd the beads. The resulting tuixturt' is further incubated at 75°C with vortexutg for approximately three days (60 hotus). After hybridization, the txtixture is centrifuged for 2 min and the supernatant is removed, after which the beads arc washed twice with 500 ~1 TF.JTWEEN and resuspended is 500 ~l lx NES buffer No. 2 with .01'/°
1 S TWEEN 20. The beads are incubated at 64°C ixt this solution for 30 ruin, after which the mixture is centrifuged so that the beads farm a pellrt, the sugeTttatant is removed, and the beads are resuspended in 500 pl TFJTBVEEN.
Loaded beads are lotted from unloaded beads ctsing a high speed cell sorter, preferably a MoFlo now cycometer eguipped with an organ ion laser operating at 4s8 rim (Cytorruttion, Inc., Ft. ColIins, CD), or like instrtimcnt. After sorting, the loaded beads arc subjected to a fill-in rcactiott by cotnbiuittg them with the following reaction components: 10 ~l IOx N1r13 buffer No. 2, 0.4 pl 2S rnlvi dNTPs, 1 ~1 1%
TWEEN 20, 2 pi T4 DNA polyrrtcrase (10 unitslrrtl), and 86.6 ~tl H20, for a anal reaction volume of 100 ~1_ After incubation at 12°C for 30 rain with vortexiug, the ?S t~eactian mixture is centrifuged so that the: beads forth a pellet and the supernatant is rerrtoved. The pelleted beads are resusgended in a ligation buffer cortsistipg of 15 wl I0x NEH buffer No. 2, 1.3 ~I 1% TWEl?N 20, 1.5 X1100 mM ATP, 1 ~1 T4 DNA
lipase (400 unitsl trtl). and 131 ~l HiO, to give a final vohurte of iS0 ~1.
The ligation xeaetion mixture is incubated xt 37°C for 1 hr with vortexin,g, after which the beads are pelleted and washed once with lx phosphate buffered saline (PBS) with 1 tnM
CaCIz. The beads are resuspcnded in 45 ~1 PBS (with 1 utM CaCla~ and combined with 5 ~1 Pronase solution (10 mglrnl, Boehriuger Matsnheim, Iudiartapolis, IN), after which the mixture is incub$ted at 37°C for 1 hr with vortexing. After centrifugation, CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

'I:ENt'Hf:N 1)2 : 5- 1- ~1 : :3:14 : +65485?06E~:3~~ +4~J 8;3 ?~' x'05-02-2000 :24pm Frort-COOLEY GODWARO +6508570663 7-382 P.ZI/33 US 009900666 the loaded beady are washed twice with TEITWEEN and then once with lx NEB t~pn II buffer (Ncrw England Hiolabs, Beverly. MA).
The tag-cf~NA conjugaTes loaded onto beads are cleaved wtth Dpn II to produce a four-nuclGOtidc protattdwg sirartd to which s complementary adaptor S carrying a 3'-label is ligated. Accordingly, the loaded beads are added to a reaction tnixt'~tre consisting of the foUowiag catnFonents: 10 ill lpx NEB Dpa h buffer, i gel °!o TWEBN, 4 ~1 Dpn B (50 units,'ml), and 85 ~tl Hz4, to give a final reaction volume of 100 pl. The mixture is incubated at 37°C overnight with vortaxittg, altar which the beads arc peU.eted, the supernasant is removed, and the beads are washed once with lx NEB buffer No. 3_ To prevent self ligation, the protruding strands of the tag-cDNA
cattjugates are treated with a phosphatase, e.g. calf intestine phosphatase (C1P), to retrwve the 5' phosphates. Aceot~d,ingly, the loaded beads are added to a reaction uiixcura consisting of the following components: 10 ~i lOx NEB buffer No_ 3, 1 pl 1 % TWEEN 20, S y~l CIP (10 urtitsl~l), and 84 pl FizO, to give a canal reaction voluate of 100 wl. The resulting mixture is incubated at 37°C for 1 hr with vortexing, after which the bCatls arc pellcted, washed once is P8S containing 1 mM CaCh, heated with Pronase as described above, washed twice wick T>~JTWEEN, anc3 once with lx NFB buffer No. 2.
The following 3'-labeled adaptoT (SE(~ ID NO: 7) is prepared using 30 conYeanot:al reagents, eg. Clontech i.aboratottes (Palo Alto, CA):
5 ~ -p,~''~ATCACGAGCTGCCAGTC-FAM
TGCTCGACGGTCRG
where "p" is a 5' phosphate group and "FAM" is a fluorescein dye attached to the 3' carbon of the last nucleotide of the top sttaad by a commercially available 3' linker' group (Clontech Laboratones). The ligation is carried out in the following reaction mixture: S ~d l Ox I~'E13 bufFcr No. 2, 0.5 Pl 1 % T'WEEN 20, 0.5 ~1 1 OQ niM
ATP, 5 ~ztl 3'-labeled adaptor (100 piuoU~el), 2.S ~1 T4 DNA lipase {400 ututslpl) and 3b.5 ~1 HiO, to give a final reaction volume of 50 pl. The reaction taixture is i»cubac~ed at lb°C overnight with vottexing, after which the beads are washers once with PBS
containing 1 tnM CaClz and treated with Prottasc as described above. After this initial ligation, the nick remaining between the adaptor and tag-eDNA conjugate is sealed by ,11 .
CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

F(( Ut?1~CHE'.'vi p3 : '~- ~~ _ 0 : ,3 : -.,~4 : +f.50t3F~7p6fi:3-. ~-g.9 B:3 _~ _ _.. _ . . .._ 05-02-2000 :25pm FrwrGWLET GOD9tARD ;6608570663 T-38i P.22133 US 009900666 simultaneously treating with both a kinaxe and a ligase as follows. loaded heeds arc rcsuspetided in a reaction mixture consisting ef the following components: 15 ~Ox NEB buffer No. 2, t.5 wl I% TWEEN ?0, 1.5 y~l 100 mM ATP, 2 wl T4 polynucleotide kitxa~ (10 unitslul), 1 pl T4 pNA lipase (~00 uniW~l), arid 1?9 ~cl HzO, for a finat reaction volume of 1 SO pl.. Tlse reaction mixture is incubated at 37°C
for 1 hr with vartexing, after which the beads are washed once with PBS
containing 1 rtu~! CaCla, a'~ted with Pmnase as described above, and washed novice with TFJTWIr~'~T.
After the labeled strand is rtZelted o~ preferably by treattnetu wuh 130 tnM
hlaOH, the reference DNA ota the beads is ready for competicivc hyb~idixadon of differ~tially expressed gene products.
Ext~mpie 2 ~tion ofd, ysag~y $~f~r_ence DNA poD ~latinn ~ this exatnpie, Sacchamtnyces cerevisiac calls of strain Y.TM930 MATa Gals SUC2 CL3p1 are grown iu separate rich aad:ainimal media cultures esseacially as descnbe by VVadicka et al. (cited above). tnRNA extracted from cells grown under both conditions are used to establish a reference cDNA popttlatioa which is tagged, sampled, amplified, labeled, and loaded onto mirropacticles. 1~oaded u~icroparticles err isolated by FRCS, labels are removed, and the non-covalently bottad stxartds of the loaded DNA 2xe melted off sad removed.
Yeast cells arc grown at 30°C either in rich medium consisting of YPD
(yeast extractlpeptonerglucose, 8ufferad, Newark, N~) or in n>iitumal mediura (yeast nitrogen base without amino acids, plus glucose, 9ufferad). Cell dctASiry is measured by counting cells fratn duplicate dilutions, acid the ntunb~r of viable cells per milliliter is estimated by plating diiutions of tht culttu~es on YPD agar imrnodiatcly before collecting c~.lls for mRNA extraction. Cells is mid-log phase (1-S x 10' cellshrtl) arc pelletcd, washed twice with AE buffer solution (50 zaM NaA.c, pH 5.2, 10 raM
EDTA), froxem in a dry ice-etbarwl bath, and stored at -80°C.
mRNA is extracted as follows for both the construction of the reference DNA
library and for preparaxeon of DNA far competitive hybridization. Total ItNA
is extracted from fro~zn cell petiets using a hot phenol method, described by Schmiu et CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

tJE\'CHJr.\ U3 ' 6- '?-- ~' ~ ~ :3 -14 : +F,6f1t36 i UEiEi3-. +49 !i9 ~~...
...- . ....., ~~05-02-2000:~6pm From-COOLEY EDWARD +6508570663 T-38Z P.Z3/33 ~JS 009900666 al., Nucleic Acids Rosea~rch, i8: 3091-3092 (1990), aritb the addition of a chloroform-isoaatyl alcohol extraction just befor precipitation of the total RNA. Phase-Lock Gel {5 Prime-3 Prime, Inc., .Boulder, CQ) i.s used for all organic extractions to increase RN A recovary and decrease tttc potential far cont~nination of the RNA with material from rha organic interface. Poly{A)~ RNA is purified frotu the total RNA with an oligo-dT selectiop step (Oligotex, Qiagen, Chatswot3tt, CA).
~ pg each of mRNA from cells grown on rich medium and minimal medium are mixed for constructtoa of a cJalvA library in a pUC 19 containing the tag rcpertoirc of Formula I. The tag repertoire of Formula I is digested with fico RI and Barn Hl and inserted into a similarly digested pUC 19. The mRNA is reverse transcribed with a conunercially available kit (Strategcae, La lolls, CA) using an olgio-dT
primer containing a seguence which generates a 8sm HI site identical to that of Fortn>ai$ I
upon second strand synthosis. Tile resulting eDNAs are cleaved with 8stn BI
and Dpn a and inserted into the tag-cnataining pUCl9 after digestloa with Bsm BI
and Rant IiI. After transfection and col4uy formation, the density of pUCl9 crattformancs is deterrnittod so that a sataple containing approximately thirty thousand tag-cDNA
coajugat,_s :nay be obtained and expanded in culture. Alternatively, a sample of tag-cDhA conjugates are obtained by picking appraxirrtately 30 thousand clones, which are theft mixed and expanded iii cultuxc.
?0 Erorti a standard tniniprep ofplasmid, the tag-cDNA conjugates are amplified by PCR with 5-tnethyldeoxycytosine triphosphate substituted for deoxyeytosinc ttiphosphate. The following 19-mer forward attd reverse primers (SEQ 1D NO: 8 and SEQ I~ NO: 9), speciFc far tlattking scqueaces in pUCl9, arc used ix~ the reaction:
forward primer: 5 ~ -biatisi-AGTGRATTCGG~GCCTTAATTAA
reverse primer: S~-PAM-GTACCCGCGGCCGCGGTCGACTCTA.~.~AGGATC
where "FAM" is an NHS ester of tluaresccia (Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA) coupled to the 5' etFd of the reverse primer via an amino linkage, r.,~
Aminolircker It (Perkin-Elmer. Applied Biosystedls Division, Foster City, CA). The reverse primer is selected so that a Not X site is reconstituted in the double stratuied product. After PCR
amplificaiioxt, the tag-cDNA conjugates are isolated on svidinated beads, e.g.

DYNABEADS (Dynal. Oslo, Norway).
- ~i3 -CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

:C .iENCt~tiN Or ~ r- ~- a : 3:?S : +fi6c1E3;570Eif~3~ +9J f39 n...
05-02-2000:Z6vm From-C'OOIET GDDWARD +650B5i0663 F-3B2 P.L4/33 US 009900666 After washing, the cDNAs wound to the beads are digested with Fac I
relc~stng the tag-cDNA ronjugatcs and a stripping reaction is carried out to render the oligonucleotide tags single stranded. After the reaction is Quenched, the tag-cDN A
conjugate is purified by phenol-chloroform extraction and combined with S.5 Qrzt GMA beads carrying tag complements, each tag complement having a 5' phosphate.
Hybridization is conducted under stringent conditions in the presence of a thetmxl stable tigase so that only tags foratiag perfxtly matched duplexes with their cornplcmcrits are ligated. The GMA buds arc washed and the loaded beads are concentrated by FRCS sortir<g, using the fluorescentty labeled cDNAs to identify loaded G.'vi.A beads. The isolated beads are mated with Pac I to remove the fluorescent-label, her which the beads are heated in an NaOH solution using conventional protocols to rauove the non-cavalently bomd suand. After sevrral washes the GMA beads are ready for cwnpetitive hybridization.
1S Example 3 La this txaatple, taR,NA is cxtr~ted from cells of each euItwe and two populations of labeled polyaucleotides are produced by a single round of poly(dT) prin~ei extension by a reverse transcriptase iz~ the presence of fluorcsccntly label nucleoside triphosphates. Equal amounts of each of the labeled palynucleotides are then combined with the GMA beads of Exacaple 1 carrying the reference QNA
population for competitive hybridization, after which the beads arc analyzed by FRCS
and those in the aff~iiagoaat regions are accumulated for MPSS analysis.
Fluorescent nucleoside triphosphates Cy3-dUTP or CYS-dt1'TP (Amcrshaitt) arc incorporated into cDNAs during reverse transcription of 1. p,g of poly(A)' RNA
obtained as described in Example I using apoly(dT)~6 prir~aer in stparate reactions.
After heating the primer and RNA to 7fl°C for 10 min, the reaction mixture is transferred to ice and a premixed solution, consisting of 2U0 U SUPFRSCR.IPT
II
(Gibcoj, buffer, deoxyribc~nucleaside triphosphates, and fletorescent nucleoside triphosphates are added to give the following concentrations: 500 ~N1 for dATP, dCTP, and dGTP; 2QQ 1rM for dTTP; and 1o0 caM each for Cy3-dUTP or CYS-dLTTP.
After incubation at 42°C for ? hotus, unincoiporated fawresceut nucleotides ace CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

_WNCHEN U2 : 5- 2- U ' 3.?5 ' +650857066357«uE,3-~ T-36I 4 P 26/33.US

~ 05-02-2000:zsam from-GOOLEY GOG~fARO
removed by first diluting the reaction mixture with 47Q ~tt of L0 tnM Iris-HCl (pH
8.0}ll mM EDTA arid then subse4uently coucrtttrating to about 5 ~1 using a CEh'TRICflN-30 concentrator (Amicon). Purified labeled cDNA from both reactions is combined nerd rcsuspendcd in 11 ~l of 3.5 x SSC containing 10 ~g paly (dA) and 0.3 pl of 10°/p SDS. Prior to hybridization the solution ~s boiled for 2 min nerd allowed to coal to coon temperature, after which it is applied to the GMA
beads and incubated far about 8-12 hours at b2°C. After washing twice is 2 x SSC
and ~.2%
SDS, the GMA beads arc rcsuspcndcd in NEB-2 buyer (New England $iolabs, Beverly, MA) attd loaded in a. Coulter EPICS Elite ESP xlow cytometer for analysis la aztd sorting. In a two dirnensicnal Quoresceace intatsiry contour plot, the GMA beads genrrdte a pauern as shown in Figure 1 a. Sorting pat'ameters are set as shown in Figure Ib so that GMA beads in tha off diagonal regions (112) ate sorted and collected for MPSS analyse.
The labeled cDNA saands are tneltcd fmm the GMA beads and removed by centrifugation. ARer several washes, a pii~aer is annealed to the prirrrer binding site sttowts in Formula I and extended in a convctttiotzal polymerization traction to reconstitute the doable suanded DNAs oa the GMA hands which include the Dpa II
site, described above. After digestion with Dpa II, beads loaded with tag-cDNA
conjugates arc placed in an ir~smuiient for MPSS analysis, as described in Albrecht et al. (cited above).
The top strands of the following 1 b sets of b3 encoded adaptors (SEQ Ip NO:
10 through S~Q ID NO: 25} are each sepuately synthesized oa art autotrated DNA
syathesi2er (model 392 Applied Biosystcrns, Foster City) using standard methods.
The bottom strand, which is the same for all adaptors, is synthesized separately rhea hybridized to the respective top suands:
S8G ID No. Encoded Adaptor l0 5 ~ _pa~rltaTACAGCTGC.~,T~cctcggcgc~.gag9 pATGCACGCGTAt~c~GG-S
5 ~ -pNANNTACAfiCTGCATccCt:gggcctgcaag pATGCACGCGTAGGG-5~
12 5~-pCNNNTACAGCTGCATCCCttgacgggtccc pATGCACGCGTRGGG-5' l3 5'-pDICNNTAC~TGCATCCCGgcccgcacag~
-~45-CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

...._ . - .-~gNCHI:;v 02 : 5- '3- 0 : (i : Z5 : +65086?UGF3-. +49 8y ~~~~r~OA
A L:r . ~~~ce 05-02-2000 i6pm F~oarCWLET aDDY~ARD +6506570663 T-36i P.i6/33 US 009900666 pATGCACGCGTAGGG-5' 14 S'-pGNNNTACR.GCTGCATCCCttcgccccggac pATGCACGCGT.4C,t3G-5 15 5' -pNGN?t'='ACAGCTGCATCCCCgatccgctagc pATGCACGCG?'AGGG- 5 ' 16 5'-pTNNNTACRGCTGCATCCCztCCgaacccgc ,pATGCACGCGTAI~GG- 5 ' 17 5' -pI~'I'~'t~TTACAGCTGCATCCCtgagggggacag pRTGCACGCGTAGGG-S' lg 5'-pNNANTRCRC,CTGCATCCCttcccgctacac pATGCACGCGTACiC,C3- 5 19 5'-pNNNAT'ACAGCTGCATCCCtgaCCCCCCgag pATCiCACGCGTAGGG- 5 ' 20 s'-pNNCrITACx~cTGCATCCCtgzgctgcgcgg pATGCACGCGT3~GGG- 5 ' 21 5'-pNNNCTACAGCTGCATCCCtctacagcagcg pATGCRCGCGTAGGG-5' 22 5'-pNNGNTACAGCTG~CATCCCtgtagcgCegct pATGCACGCGTAGGG-5' 23 5' -pND7~TGTACA~GCTGG~TCCCLCggagcaacct pATGCRCGCGTAGGG-5' 24 5'-pNNTNTACA~GCTGCATCCCcggcga~ccgtag pATGCACGCGTAGGG-5' 25 5'-pNNN'tTACAGCTGCATCCCLCCCCtgtcgg3 pATGCAC6CGTAGGG-5' .
where N is aay of dA, dC. dG, or d'I; p is a phosphate group; and the aucleotidcs indicated in lower case letters are the 12-mer oligonucleotide tags. Each tag differs from every other by 6 nucleosides. Equal moiaz quantities of each adaptor are S combined irk NEB ~2 r~est.~ction buffer (New Eul;land 8iolabs, Heverly, MA?
to farm a mixture at a concenuatiou of 1400 pmoUpL.
Each of the 15 tag contplare separately synthesized as amino-derivatizcd oligonuclcotides and ate each labeled wick a fluorescein molecule tub an NHS-ester of fluurcscein, available from Molecular ProbCS, Eugene, OR) which is l(1 attached to the 5' end of the tag complement carough a polyethylene glycol linker (Clotiesech Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA). The seduences of the tag complements are supply the 13-tner cornplcmcuts of the ts~s listed above.
Ligatian of the adaptors to the target polynucleotide is carried out in a mixture consistiag of 5 pI beasts (20 mg), 3 ~L NEB 14x ligase buffer, 5 ~L adaptor mix (25 CA 02317695 2000-0?-04 AMENDED SHEET

IE\CHb"1 0:.~ : 5- ?- C1 : a1:'~Ei : +F>5U$~'~74E63-~ +4~~3 89 2:'°ww w ac.'i~'~
C O~J-02-2000 2Tpm From-GOOLET GOOhARD +6508570563 T-36Z P.ZT/33 US 009900666 nM), 2.S pL NEB T4 DNA lipase (204 uuitslpL), and I4.5 l~L distilled water-The mixture is incubated at 15°C for 30 tttintttcs, sf~er which the beads are washed 3 times in TE (pti 8.0).
ARer ccntrirugation and removal of TE, the 3' phosphates of the ligated a.daptors are removed by treating the polynucleotide-bead mixture with calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase (C1P) (New England Biolabs. Beverly, MA), using the manufacturers protocul. After removal of the 3' phosphates, zhe CIP may be inactivated by proteolytic di;estioa, e,g. using PronaseTM (available form Boeringer Mannhiern, Indianapolis, IN), or an equivalent protease, with the m,axtufacturrr's protocol. The polynucleoude bead mixtute is then washed, treated with a mixture of T4 polyuucleotide lanase Bud T4 DNA. lipase (New England 8iolabs, 8cvcrly, MA) to add a 5' phosphate at the gap between the target polynucleotide and the adapter, and to complete the ligation of the adapters to the target polynuclcotide. The bcad-polynucl~tide mixture is thin washed in TE.
1 S Separately, each of the labeled tag complements is applied to the polynucleotide-bead mixture uteder conditions which permit the formation of perfectly matched duplexes only between the oligonucleotide tags and their respective cotttplements, afier which the tnixiure is washed utuier stringent conditions, and the presence or absence of a fluorescent signal is measured. Tag coutplemepts are applied in a solution consisting of 25 nM tag cotnplernezu 50 mM NaCI, 3 tnM
Mg, 1D mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5), at 20°C, incubated for 10 minutes, tbezi washed icl the same solucion (without tag complententj for 10 minute at 55°C.
After the font nucleotides are identifiad as described above, the encoded adapters are cleaved frotu the palynucleotides with 8by I using the maaufacnue~'s 2S protocol. After an initial ligation and identification, the cycle of ligation, iden~ficatiori, and cleavage is repeated three times to give the sequence of the 16 ~crminal nucleotides of the target polynucleotide.
Preferably, analysis of the hybridized encoded adapters ties place irr an insttucntnt which i) constrains the loaded micmpatricles to be disposed in a planar array io a flow chamber, iiy permits the prog~rat~aed delivery of process reagents to the flow chatnber, and iii) detects simultaneously optical signals from the :nay of rt<icroparticles. Such a pt'eferred instrutneat is showtr diagrammatically in Figure 2, and more fully disclosed in 8ridgham et al., international Patent publication _q,7_ CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

__ !E,ICI~EIV 11~? ' i- '~- O : :3 : Z6 : +65UFiS?UCi(ii-. +4.~ FS9 ~~.'~.~. .
~.'- .....,r, 05-02-2000 27pm Fron-COOLEY GDD11AR0 +6508570663 T-38Z P.Z8/33 US 009900666 W09$IS3300. Briefly, flow chamber (500) is prepared by etching a cavity having a fluid inlzt (S02) and outlet (S04) in a glass plate (Stl6) using standard uucrotttachining techniques, e.g. Elaaam ec al., International pstcent gublicaaon WO91116966;
Brown, U.S. patent 4,911,78?; F3asrisoa et al., R.nal_ Chem. b4: 1926-193? (1992);
arid the hbce. Thr dimeir.siop ef flow chamber (SD0) are such that loaded microparticles (508), e.g. GMA beads, may be disposed in cavity (S10) in a closely packed planar monplayer of 100-200 thousand beads. Cavity (510) is ~cla into a closed chamber with inlet and outlet by aaodic bonding of a glass cover slip (S12) onto the etched glass plate (506), e.g. Pomeraatz, U.S. patent 3,397,279. Reagents are metered into the flow chamber from syringe pumps (S14 through 520) through valve block (S2?

controlled by a microprocessor as is eoiumotlly wised on automated DNA and peptide sy~athesizers, e.g. Bridghaca et al., U_S. patent x,668,479: Hood ~ al., U.S, patent ~,252,7b9; Barstow et al., U.S. patent 5,203,358; Hunkapilier, U.S. patent 4,703,913;
or the like.
Three cycles of ligatiott, iderui&cation, and cleavage ace carried out is flow charrtber (S00) to give the sequences of 12 Ilacleotides at the termini of tech of approximately 100. fra$mencs. Nucleotides of the fragments are identified by hybridi2ing tag cotnplertteuts to the encoded adaptors as described above.
Specifically hybridized tag complertte~nts are detected by exciting their fluorescent labels with illumination beam (S2a) from light source (S2b), which may be a laser, rncrcury arc lamp, or the like. 111wniuation beam (52~) passes through filter (528) and excites the fluorescent labels on tag complements specifically hybridized to encoded adapters ill flow chamber (500). Resulting tluorescertee (S30) is collected by confocal microscope (S32), passed though filter (534), and directed to CCD
camera (53C), which creases an elecgonic image of the bead array for processing and analysis by workstation (538). preferably, after each ligation and cleavage step, the cDNAs are neared with PronaseTM or like ~yme. Encoded adaptors and T4 D1VA ligase (Promega, Madisosl,1Ni) at about 0.75 units per ~~ are passed through the flow chamber at a flow rate of about 1-2 JCL prr minute for about 30-30 minutes at 16°C, after which 3' phosphates arc removed from the adapwrs and the cDNAs prepared for second strand ligation by passing a rrtixture of alkaline phosphatase (~Tew Zragland Bioscience, Beverly. MA) at 0.02 units per wL and T4 I)NA kiaase (New ~nø~.
land 8iosciettce, Beverly, MA) at 7 units per ~L tluoagh tEue flow chamber at 37°C with a .q8_ CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

+6509570663 T-36Z P.ZB/93 ~ 05-02-2000 Z pm H~ F ~om-GWLEY WOWARD ' ~ ~ 3 . ~f ~ ~ ~~5U~57~f )F~ +~3 ~~
.7, US 009900666 flow rate of 1-2 pL per minuet for 15~?0 minutes. Ligation is accomplished by T.~
DNA ligase (.?~ units par a~L, Pramega) through the flow chamber for 20-30 minutes.
Tag complctnents at 25 nM concentration are p;3sscd through the flow chamber at a flow race of i-2 p.l- per minute for 10 cnmutes at 20°C, after which xluorescent labels S carried by the tag complements are iliurninated xnd fluorescence is cahccte3. The txg completuents are melted from the enccded adaptors by passing hybridization buffer through the flow chamber at a flow rate of l-2 pL per minute at SS°C
for 10 minutes.
hncoddd adaptors are craved from the ch'.~TAS by passing ~3bv I (hlcw England Biosciences, 8evctly, MA) at I unitl~L at a flow rate of 1-2 ~I. per rriiuute for 20 minutes at 37'C.
Example 4 of nNA~:~.~lsd with E~,us~~e~in arid CY5 !n this example, the sensitivity ofdetecting different ratios ofdiffercmly labeled cDNAs was tested by eonstTttctiztg s refere~ncc F3NA papulauap consisting of a single clone and then competitively hybridizirt;g to the reference phlA
population different ratios of complementary strands labeled with diffezent fluorescent dyes_ The reference DNA population consisted of a eDNA clone, designatod "88.1 l," which is an g7-basepair fragment of an expressed gent of the human mouocyte cell lice T3~P-1, available from the American Type Gulturc Collection (Rockville, Maryland) under acc~ssir~n cumber TIB 202. The aucleottde sequence of 88.11 has a high degree of homology to many entries m the GenBsnk Expressed Sequence Tag library, e_g. gb AA830602 (98%). The reference DNA populasion, which consisted of only 88.11 ?5 cl3NA, was prepared as described in Example 1, with the exception that a special population of micraparticles was prepared in which all tnicroparticles had the same tag complement attached. The corresponding oliganucleotide tag was aaached to the 88.11 cDNA. Thus, only monaspecific populatiotLS of tags arid tag comglemetits were involved in the experitxtcut. After competitive hybridization, the loaded 34 micropariicles were analyzed on a Cytotuattiart, lnc. (Ft. Collars, CO) FAGS
instrument as describCd above.
88.11 cISNA was also cloned into a vector identical to that of Example 1 (330 of Figure 3f), except that it did not contain tal; 336. 10 ~g of vector DNA
was _~g_ CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

~~ 05-02-2000 i ~~iF Ffo~rrC00lEY GODYI RD ~~ ~~ ~ 3~ ~7 ' +G5()ti57UGG3-. +49 ~9 Z US 009900666 +6606510663 T-3H2 P.30/33 lineanud by cleaving to cortspletion with Sau 3A, an isosehi~dmeT of Dpn II
(342 of Figure 3b), after which two 1 Wg aliquots of tfae punned linear DNA were taken.
From each 1 ~g aliquot, abort 20 ~g of labeled single stranded DIVA product was produced by repeated cycles of linear ataplificatiora uriug primers specific for pnrner binding site 332. is one aliquot, product was labeled by incorporation of rhndamine Rl 10-labeled dLT'IP tPE Applied 8iosystetns. Foster City, CA); and in the other aliquot, product was labeled by incorporation of CYS-labeled dLTTP (Amersham Corporation, Ariingtop Heights, IL). quantities of the labeled products were combined to form seven 5 ytg amounts of the two products in ratios of 1: l, 2:1, 1:2.
!0 4:1, 1:4, 8:1, and 1:8. The 5 ~g quantities oflabeled product were separately hybridized to l .b x lUs microparticles (GMA buds with 88.11 cDNA attached) overnight at 65°C iu 50 pl 4x SSC with 0.2% SDS, after which the reaction was quenched by diluting to 1 Q ml with ice-cold TFJTI~~N buffer (defined above).
The loadod microgxrticles were centrifuged, washed by suspending iri 0_S tnl 1 x SSC with 0.2% SDS far 15 min at 65°C, centnfuged., and washed again by suspending in 0.S cell O.lx SSC with 0.2% SDS far 15 min at 55°G. After tho second washing, the micropar(icles were centrifuged and resuspcaded in Q.S ml T1;JTWEEN solution for FAGS analysis.
The results pure shown in Figures Sa-tie, where in each Figure the vertical axis corresponds to CYS fluorescence and the horizontal ails corresponds to thodaaurte 8110 fluorescence. Iu Figure Sa, a population of microgarticles were combined that bad either ah Rl 10-labeled Dlr'A or all CYS-labeled DNA hybridized to the camplezrientary referetue strands. Contours 550 and 552 are cl~rly distinguished by the detection system of the FAGS instruttieat and tnicroparticles of both populations produce readily detectable signals. FigurC Sb illustrates the ease where the Rl 10- and CYS-labeled strands are hybridized is equal proportions. As expected, the resulting contour is located on the diagonal of tht graph and corresponds to the position expected for non-reEulated genes- Figures Sc through Sc show the analysis of three pairs of carapetuive hybridizations: i) RI 10- and CYS-labeled strands hybridized in a 2:1 concentratioil ratio and a 1:2 concentration ratio, ii) 8110- and CYS-labeled strands hybridized is a 4:1 cotrceutration ratio and a 1:4 concentration ratio, and iii) 8110- and CYS-labeled strands hybridi2ed in an 8:1 concentration rana and a 1:8 concentration ratio. Ttae data of Figure Sv suggest that genes up-regulated or down--SO-CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

;C' iENCI IEN 03 ' 6 - Z- 0 : :3 : '.~_7 : +6SU857UfiE:3-. +4:~ t3:3 2t'"'~~~
~ ~~~ . "~"
05-02-2000 ZBPm Ff'om-COOLEY GODWARO +6508570663 T-38Z P.31/3b US 009900666 regulated by a factor of two arc detectable ir1 the present embodiment, but that significant overlap may exist between signals gerzeratrd by regulated arid rion-regulatzd genes. Figures Sd and Se suggest that genes up-regulated or dawn-regulated by a factor of four or higher era readily detectable over tiozl-regulated genes.
lrxampte 5 E~.~.gt~IZi~l~~yr~S~t ~~-frflm ~timtlatc_d and n tirnniated THP-1 ~ell~
In this example, a reference DNA population attached to micmparticles was constructed froth cDNA derived from THP-1 cells stiraulated as indicaicd below.
1=quat concetitratious of Iabe(cd cpNAs firolxi both stimulated and tuistimttiated ~'FiP-1 cells were then competitively hybridi2ed to the reference DNA population, as described in Example 1, and the micraparticles carrying the labeled cDNAs were aualy2ed by $ FRCS ins4nitnent. 'THF-1 cells were stimulated by trt~ient with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS).
THP-1 cetla were grown iu T-1b5 flasks (Costar, No. 3151) containing SO ml DMEM/F12 media (Cribco, No. 11320-033) supplanatted with 10°/a fetal bovine sCrutn (FBS)(Gibco, No. 26140-038),100 units/tn1 pepicillitt, 104 ~gltal streptottiycin (Gibco, No. 15140-122), and 0.5 pM j~-mercaptoethanol (Sigma, No. M3148).
2U Cultures were seeded with 1 x 10' cellsuiil and grown to a maximal de~tsity of 1 x 106 Doubling tiznz of the ceu populations in culture was about 36 hours. Cells were treated with PMA as follows: Cells from a flask (aboeu 5 x 10' cells) ware centrifuged (Beckman model GS-bR) at 1200 rprn for 5 minutes aanid rcsuspcaded in 50 m1 of fresh culture ruedia (without antibiotics) containing S ~1 of I_0 trill PMA
(Sigma, No. P-8139) iu DMSO (Gibco No. 21985-0?3) or 5 ~1 DMSO (for the utistuaulaied population), after which the cells arcre cultured for 48 hours.
Following the.~8 hour ineubatian, media and aori-adherent cells were aspitxted frorti the experimental tZask (i.e. eotita~ning stimulated cells) aztd $esh trtcdia (without antibiotics) was added, the fresh media containing 10 pl of 5 rnghttl LPS
(Siesta, h~o.
L-4130) is phosphate buffered saline (PBS). The culture of unstimulated cells was eenuifugc~ci (Beckman model GS-bR) at 1240 rpm for 5 minutes at 4°C so that a pellet foriaed which was then rcsuspended in 50 ml of firesh growth media containing 10 ~I
PBS. Soth the cultures of stimulated and unsdrnulated cells were incubated at 37°C
. ~l .
CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

~~ 05-02-2000 ZBpmt~F Ftam-t:00LElf GOOW RD ~ ~ ~ .~~ ~ +650857066~3~57~6~3~ T-382 ~~ F.3Z/33 US 009900666 for four hours, after wench cells w ere harvested as follows: Ntedia was aspirated from the cultures and adherent cells were washed twice with warm PBS, after w'ch 10 ml P13S was added and the cells were dislodged mth a cell scaper. The dislodged ells warn collected and their conc~utration was determined with a hemacytometer, after which they were centrifuged (l3eckmau model GS-5R) at 1204 rpm for 3 rninates to form a pellet which was used immediately for RNA extz~aetioa.
mRNA was extracted froth about S x 106 cells using a FastTrack ? .0 kit (No.
K1593-02, Lt~vitrogen, lnc. San Dingo, CA) far isolating mRNA. The ntanufacfarer's protocol was followed without sigaificat:t alterations. A reference DNA
population attached to microparticles was constructed froth mRNA extracted from stimulated cells, as described in Example 1. Separate cDNA hbrarits were constructed from mRN A extracted from stimulated and unstitnulated cells. The vectors used for the libraries were identical to that of l:acanaple I, excrpt that they did not contaitz oligonucleotide tags (33b of Figure 3b). Following the protocol of Pxampie 4, approx.iruately 2.5 pg of rhodattaine RI 10-labeled single stranded DNA was produced from the cDNA library derived fxoua stimulated cells, and approximately 2.S ~g of CYS-Labeled siifgle strandad DNA was produced from the cDNA library derived from unstimulated cells. The two 2.5 leg aliquots were mixed and competitively hybridized to the reference DNA on 9.34 x 10; microparticles. The reaction conditions and 30 protocol was as dcscribet! in Example 4.
After hybridisation, the ruicropatticles were sorted by a Cytotnation, Inc, MoFlo FACS instrument as described above. Figure 6 contains a canvt=c~tional FRCS
contour plot 600 of the fxequertcies of tnicmparticles with different fluoresceztt intensity values for the two Auorescettt dyes. Approxitxtately 10,000 ttticroparticles corrcspondiug to up-regulated genes (sort window 602 of Figure fi) were isolated, cad approximately 12,004 mtcroparticles corresponding to down-regulated genes (sort window 604 of Figure 6) were isolated. After matting off the labeled strands, as described above, the cDNAs carried by the tnicroparticles were amplified using a cottlmereial PCR cloning kit (Clonteeh Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA), and cloned into the rnauufa~cturec's rccornmerided clotting vector. After uansformadon, expansion of a host culture, and plating, 87 colonies of up-regulated eDNAs were picked arid colonies of down-regulated cDNAs were picked. cDNAS catxied by plaszxtids extractzd from these colonies were sequenced using convenrionai protocols on a PE
-5?-CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

Applied Biosystems model 373 automated DNA sequencer. The identified sequences are listed in Tables 1 and 2.
Table 1 GenBank No. Copies Description Indentifter 16 TNF-inducible (TSF-6) mRNA HLTMTSG6A

15 GRO-y (MIP-2~i) HUMGROGS

GRO-(i (MIP-2a) HUMGROB

6 act-2 ~,~2A

4 guanylate binding protein isoformHUMGBP1 I (GBP-2) 4 spernudine/spermin Nl-acetyltransferaseHLJMSPERMNA

4 adipocyte lipid-binding protein ,Bp 3 Fibronectin HSFIB 1 3 interleukin-8 HSMDNCF

1 insulin-like growth factor bindingHSIGFBP3M
protein 3 1 interferon-y inducible early HSINFGER
response gene 1 type IV collangenase 1 cathepsin L HSCATHL

1 Genomic/EST HSAC002079 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) Table 2 GenBank No. Copies Description _ Indentifier ~r~~~

16 Elongation factor 1 HSEF1AC

4 Ribosomal protein S3a/v-fos tranf.HUMFTEIA
Effector _ _ 6 Ribosomal protein S7 HiJMRPS 17 2 Translationally controlled tumorHSTUMP
protein 3 23 kD highly basic protein HS23KDHBP

2 Laminin receptor HUMLAMR

2 Cytoskeletal gamma-actin HSACTCGR

2 Ribosomal protein L6 HSRPL6AA

2 Ribosomal protein L 10 HLTIVIRP 1 OA

2 - Ribosomal protein L21 HSU14967 2 Ribosomal protein S27 HSU57847 1 ribosomal protein LS HSU14966 1 Ribosomal pmtein L9 HSU09953 1 Ribosomal protein L17 HSRPL17 1 Ribosomal protein L30 HSRPL30 1 Ribosomal protein L38 HSRPL38 1 Ribosomal protein S8 HSRPS8 1 Ribosomal protein S 13 HSRPS 13 1 Ribosomal protein S 18 HSRPS 18 1 Ribosomal protein S20 HUMRPS20 1 Acidic ribosomal phosphoprotein HUMPPARPO
PO

1 26S proteasome subunit p97 HUM26SPSP

1 DNA-binding protein B FfIJMAAE

1 T-cell cyclophilin HSCYCR

1 Interferon inducible 6-26 mRNA HSIFNIN4 1 Hematopoetic proteoglycan core HSHPCP
protein 1 Fau HSFAU

1 beta-actin HSACTB

1 Nuclear enc. mito. serine HUMSHMTB
hydroxymethyltrans.

1 Mito. Cytochrome c oxidase subunitHUMMTCDK
II

1 Genomic W92931 3 Genomic SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) WO 99!35293 PCT/US99/00666 Example 6 F na~vsis of Differentiall3r E~nressed Cenes from (Experiment: Comp 11 ) A reference DNA population attached to microparticles was constructed from cDNA derived from stimulated THP-1 cells. cDNA from stimulated and unstimulated THP-1 cells was prepared for competitive hybridization as follows. 20 pg each of the THP-1 unstimulated probe library (U3A-TL) and the THP-1 stimulated probe library (S3A-TL) were digested with 50 units of Sau3A to prepare the vector for linear PCR.
The DNA was purified by phenol/chloroform extraction and fluorescently labelled by PCR. For calibration purposes, both CYS and Rl 10 were used to label each condition.
The U3A-TL DNA was labeled with CYS and the S3A-TL DNA was labeled with 8110. Briefly, a reaction mixture containing 80 p,l lOX PCR Buffer; 16 ~1 biotinylated primer (B-Primer,125 pmole/:1); 16 pl dNTPs (6.25 mM); 4 ~g template;
16 pl Klentaq enzyme; 64 ~1 Rl 10 dUTP or 6.4 p,l of CYS dUTP; and water to bring the total volume to 800 ~,I. This mixture was dispensed into 8 aliquots, which~then underwent 34 cycles of PCR according to the following protocol: 1) 94°C

min; 2) 94°C 30 sec; 3) 62°C 30 sec; 4) 72°C 1 min; and 5) 72°C 10 min. The PCR
reaction was purified and the colored nucleotides were removed by precipitation.
Reference Poyula 'on The Comp 11 bead library consisted of 2,667,369 beads, with a complexity of 1 million clones from the THP-1 stimulated library. The beads were prepared as described above as outlined in Figure 3. The starting PMT2 mean for the FITC
signal was 19.5. The duplexed DNA on the beads was denatured with 2.5 ml 150mM NaOH
washes at RT for l5min with mild vortexing. The efficiency of the denaturization was determined by measuring the remaining FITC signal mean, which was 2.2, i.e., 11.3% residual fluorescence. The beads were washed twice in .5 ml of 4X SSC
.1%
SDS.
100,000 beads were hybridized with 10 ~g of each linear PCR product of the stimulated probe library (S3A-TL) labeled with CYS and the same library labeled with 8110. 936,542 beads were hybridized with 10 ~g of CYS stimulated probe and 10 p.g of 8110 unstimulated probe. The beads were assembled in 50 ~.1 with a final SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 2B) ~2C I~!~iCHly'!~ C12 : 5- 2- 0 : 3 : 2t3 : +Ei iU857U6ti3- +49 t3~ ~):»,~,e , ue ....,n 05-02-2000 Z9pm' Fron-COOLEY GODWkRD +6506570663 7-362 P.33/33 ~S 009900666 buffer composition of 4X SSCL1 p/o SpS. The samples were heated to 80°C
for 3 minutes, the probes were added end the temperature was moved to bS°C_ Hybridization continued for I6 hrs. with vonexing. The bed yv~.; ice quenched in ml of TE TWEEN. Tbc recovered samples were rinsed 2 pores with 1X SSC L1%
5 SDS, rcsuspended in .S tnl of 1X SSC L1%SOS. ~ w6~shed at 63°C for IS
min. The beads were rinsed in .1X SSC LI°/øSDS and washed at 55'C in .1X SSC L1%
SpS for 1 ~ min. The samplc$ were ritlsed with TE TWEEN ~ l0,ppp ~,ents of both s~nples were analyzed on the Bp );acsCalbcr. 10,163 beads (1.150), the brightest CY3 a~
the 1:I disgooal, were sorted. 11,977 beads (1.35!), ~ ~gbtest Rl 10 off the l: l 10 diagonal. were sorted. The beads were pooled in a FCR reaction, TA cloned, ~d seduenced. The idetttifiesl sequences are listed in Tables 3 atxd 4.
'~'~oDle 3 ~~~~k No. CQ iex Ilescri tfo~

ldeadtier 9 3 kD hi y basic portent S23 1~p 1 2fS teasotne aubtmit p55 A.8003I03 7 26S coceasome subuttit p97 pSP

1 28kD heat shock protein FiSFiS

3 90 kp P HSHSP90R
~

1 ~ NAC H ANAC

a-cnolaae H A.F

a 1 acid glyc Totriu GP I A

21 Acidic ri somal hasphoprotein ~p~0 P4 ' 4 Acidic riboso l ma ~ARpl hospltoprotein P1 Acidic nbosomal hos boprotrin P2 ..~~.~
PAR

1 activiu ~i-C ctsain , HSA TNaC

~Y Yl cYclase-associated protein (CAP) 4DPIA it~
sl n CA
ocase TL

3 ~1~-iutlamaaato factor 1 .

13 'Anttoxidaut enzyme AOE37-2 HSU2S182 I

1 ArpZl3 proteixs cons lex su unit AFOGb084 p2lArc rotei ~P~

p AF0 0 6 n complex subunit lAre 1 ATP-d ead ent A hrlicase A8001 b3fi i a va~l~

7 basic trattscri non factor 3a Fi HTF3 (8 3a) 3 B~
a v.a BBCl b~ca-acts xsAcx$

I brain-expressed CPA78 hamolog 573591 1 c-myc transcription factor puf ~p~

Calmoclulin ~CA~

h_ _ ~HUMC.R.E82A
Ic~P response element regulatory PratetTt CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 AMENDED SHEET

GenBank No. CopiesDescription Identifier 1 cis-acting HUMCIS
sequence 1 Cksl HSCKSNS2 protein homolog 3 clathrin HSU36188 assembly protein Cu/Zn HSSODRI

1 Cyclo philin HUMCYCLO

3 Cytoc hrome HSCOX7AL
c oxidase cox VIIa-L

1 Cytochrome HUMCOXCA
c oxidase subunit Vb 3 Cytochrome HSCOVIC
c oxidase subunit Vic 4 Cytoskeletal HSACTCGR
gamma-actin 3 C ytoskeletal HSTROPCR
tropomycin 4 D NA-binding HfUMAAE
protein B

small RNAs associated protein (EAP) 30 Elongation HSEF1AC
factor a 1 Elongation HSEF1DELA
factor .

1 Elongation HSEF 1 GMR
factor y 1 ERp28 HSERP28 protein 9 Fau HSFAU

1 ferritin HUMFERL
L
chain 1 Fibronectin HSFNRA
receptor 4 Fus HSFUSA

2 G-(3-like HUMMHBA123 protein 4 Glutaminyl HSGTS
tRNA
synthetase 2 H+ HSATPSYN
ATP
synthase subunit b 2 H3.3 HUMHISH3B
histone, class B

Heat AF068754 shock factor binding protein 5 Heat HSHSP86 shock pmtein 4 Hematopoetic HSHEAM
lineage cell specific protein 2 Hemato poetic proteoglycan core HSHPCP
protein 1 HLA-D R associated protein HSPHAPII

2 Icln HSU17899 chlorine channel regulatory protein 1 IMP HfUMIMP
dehydrogenase 3 Initiation HSINTFA4B
factor 1 Insulinoma HUMIDB
rig analog 2 Interferon HSIFNIN4 inducible mRNA

11 Lactate HSLDHBR
dehydrogenase B

12 Laminin HUMLAMR
receptor 1 Leucine-rich HUM130LEU
protein 1 LLRep3 HSLLREP3 1 low HSU71127 Mr GTP-binding protein (RAB32) CA 0 2 317 6 9 5 2 0 0 0 - 0 7 - 0 4 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) GenBswk No. CopiesDescription Identifier 2 MAPKAP kinase HSU09578 (3pK) MHC protein HtIJMMHBA123 hom. to chicken B complex protein 1 Mitochondria)ytochrome c oxidase IiLJMMTCDK
c subunit II

2 Mitochondria)hosphate carrier proteinSSMPCP
p 1 Mitochondria) HUMSH1VITB
serine hydroxymethyl transferase 1 Mitochondria) MITIHS
tRNAs 2 Mitochondria) HSUBPQPC
ubiquinone-binding protein 1 Mn SOD-2 HUMSUDIS

2 Myeloid HSU85767 progenitor inhibitory factor (MPIF-1) 1 Myosin regulatory HSMRLCM
light chain Nuclear-encoded HUMSHMTB
mito. serine hydroxyn~e,t?~yltransferase 1 P2U nucleotide S74902 rece~.t~r 8 Palmitoyl-protein HSU44772 thioesterase ~

1 Phosphate HSPHOSC
Garner 2 Prothymosin HUMTHYMA
a 21 Ribosomal HUMRP10A
protein 4 ribosomal HSRPL11 protein 8 __ D87735 ribosomal protein 13 ribosomal HSRPL17 protein 4 ribosomal hfUMR)BPROD
protein Ll8a 27 ribosomal HSU14967 protein 4 ribosomal HSL23MR
protein L23 (putative) 4 ribosomal HSU12465 protein 4 ribosomal HSRP26AA
protein 6 ribosomal HSU14968 protein L27a 1 ribosomal HSU14969 protein ribosomal HSRPL29 protein 10 ribosomal HUMRRL3A
protein 2 ribosomal HUMRPL30A
protein 1 ribosomal HSRPL30 protein 12 ribosomal HSRPL32 protein 1 ribosomal HLJMRPL34A
protein 1 ribosomal HSU12465 protein 3 ribosomal HSRPL37A
protein L37a 11 ribosomal HSRPL38 protein 8 ribosomal HSHRPL4 protein 3 ribosomal AF026844 protein 19 ribosomal HSU14966 protein LS

22 ribosomal HSRPL6AA
protein 17 ribosomal HSRBPRL7A
protein 13 ribosomal HUMRPL7A
protein L7a 19 ribosomal HSU09953 protein SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) WO 99/35293 pCT/US99/00666 GenBank No. Copies , Description Identifier 25 ribosomal protein S 11 HSRPS 11 ribosomal protein S 13 HSRPS 13 11 ribosomal protein SlSa HSRPS15A

5 ribosomal protein S 16 ~S~

28 ribosomal protein S 17 HIJMRPS 17 35 ribosomal protein S 18 HSRPS 18 2 ribosomal protein S 19 HUMS 19RP

6 ribosomal protein S20 HUMRPS20 11 ribosomal pmtein S27 HSU57847 17 ribosomal protein S28(hu homologHLTMRSPT
3 of yeast) HSHUMS3 ribosomal protein S3 4 ribosomal protein S3a/v-fos HUMFTElA
transf. effector pmtein 6 ribosomal protein S4 HUMRPS4X

1 ribosomal protein S7 HUMRPS7A

20 ribosomal protein S8 HSRPS8 1 RNAse/angiogenin inhibitor HSRAI

1 small nuclear RNA U2 HSU25766 5 T-cell cyclophilin HSCYCR

1 T-cell surface glycoprotein HSE2 1 transcriptional coactivator HSU12979 1 t ranslation initiation factor HLTMELF2 2 (3 subunit 1 t ranslation initiation factor HSU54559 eIF3 p40 subunit 2 t ranslationally controlled tumorHSTLJMP
pmtein 1 Ul small nuclear RNP-specific HSU1RNPC
C protein 2 ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidase D55636 s smallest ubunit 1 ubiquinone binding protein HUMQBPCA

4 Ubiquitin HSU49869 2 Ubiquitin HUMUBI13 7 u biquitin Uba52 HSUBA52P

11 u biquitin Uba80 HSIBA80R

i 1 BE ST AI031866 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) _ _ GenBank No. Copies_ Description Identifier 918 total sequenced (downregulated) Table 4 GenBank No. Copies Description Identifier 6 23 kD highly basic protein HS23KDHBP

103 Act-2 HUMACT2A

1 activated B cell factor 1 AF060154 1 activating transcription factor HUMATF3X

2 adenylyl cyclase-associated proteinHLJMADCY
(CAP) 47 adipocyte lipid-binding protein IiLJMALBP

3 aquaporin 9 AB008775 17 ATPase HUMHOlA

1 Cathepsin B HUMCATHB

Cathepsin L - HSCATHL

5 EBV-induced protein HSU19261 1 Elongation factor 1 HSEF1AC

46 Fibronectin HSFIB 1 57 Guanylate binding protein isofortnHUMGBP1 I (GBP-2) 2 IFN-y inducible early response HSINFGER
gene 33 IGF binding protein 3 HSIGFBP3M

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) GenBank No. Copies Description Identifier 1 IL-1 receptor antagonist HSI1RA

3 IL-1 ~i HLJMIL 1BA

20 B,_g _ HSMDNCF

4 Insulin-like growth factor bindingHSIGFBP3M
protein 3 3 JKA3 mRNA induced upon T cell HSU38443 stimulation 3 Macrophage scavenger receptor HUMRMSRl type I

184 MIP-la {LD78) HUMCKLD78 218 MIP-2a (GRO-(3) HUMGROB

50 MIP-2(3 (GRO-'y) HUMGROGS

58 Mn SOD HSMNSOD

4 Musculin AF087036 1 Paraplegin HSPARAPLE

3 Prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase-2HIJMPTGS2 1 Reticulocalbin HLTMRCN

1 Ribosomal protein L21 HSU14967 1 Ribosomal protein L7 HSRBPRL7A

1 Ribosomal protein S28 HUMRSPT

34 Spermidine/spermine Nl-acetyltransferaseHUMSPERMNA

1 Striated muscle contraction reg. FiUMID2B
Protein 95 TNF-inducible (TSG-6) mRNA HUMTSG6A

TNFa HSTNFR

2 Translation initiation factor HCT1VIELF2 2(3 1 TRNA-Ala HSCR6ALAT

17 Type IV collagenase HUM4COLA

_ _ _ 3 EST ~8~27 2 EST, IL-1/TNF-inducible HSEST222 4 Genomic HSAC000119 4 Genomic AC000403 1 Genomic AC004130 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) GenBank No. Copies Description Identifier 1157 Total sequenced (npregnlated) Ezampte 7 FAGS A_nal3rsis of Differentiall,~F. pressed C1e_n_es from (Experiment: Comp 14) In a separate experiment, reference DNA population preparation and competitive hybridization were done as described in Example 6. 9150 beads (0.89%), the brightest CYS off the 1:1 diagonal, were sorted. 11085 beads (1.15%), the brightest 8110 off the 1:1 diagonal, were sorted. The identified sequences are listed in Tables 5 and 6.
Table 5 No. CopfesDescription 29 H.sapiens mRNA for 23 kD
highly basic protein 13 H.sapiens mRNA for ribosomal protein S18 12 Laminin receptor homolog mRNA

12 H.sapiens mRNA for ribosomal protein L26 12 Human ribosomal LS protein mRNA

9 Human mRNA for elongation factor 1-alpha 9 H.sapiens mRNA for large subunit of ribosomal protein 7 H.sapiens gene for ribosomal protein L38 6 Homo Sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=IMAGE

6 H.sapiens rpS8 gene for ribosomal protein S8 5 Human ribosomal protein L3 mRNA

5 Human Ki nuclear autoantigen mRNA

5 Human ribosomal pmtein L7a mRNA

5 Novel 5 Human mRNA for ribosomal protein S 11 5 Neuroblastoma RAS viral (v-ras) oncogene homoiog 5 Human mitochondria) DNA

S H.sapiens initiation factor 4B cDNA

5 Human endothelial-monocyte activating polypeptide II mRNA

5 Novel 5 Human monocytic leukaemia er protein (MOZ) mRNA
zinc fing 4 Human platelet activating hydrolase, brain isoform, factor acetyl 45 kDa subunit (LIS 1 ) gene SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) No. Copes Description 4 Human ferritin L chain mRNA

4 Human DNA
sequence from cosmid cN37F10 on chromosome 22q11.2-qter 4 Human mRNA
for core I protein 4 H.sapiens mRNA homologous to mouse P21 mRNA

4 H.sapiens mRNA for ribosomal protein 4 Human ribosomal protein L9 pseudogene 4 Homo sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone---486654 4 Human MHC
protein homologous to chicken B complex protein mRNA

4 Human elongation factor EF-1-alpha gene 3 H.sapiens Subl.S mRNA

3 Human mRNA
for Apol_Human (MERS(Aopl-Mouse)-like protein) 3 Homo sapiens chromosome S, P1 clone 702A10 (LBNL
H56) 3 Human fumaraseprecursor (FH) mRNA

3 Homo SapiensNA, 3' end cD /clone=I1VIAGE:1695780 3 Human GST1-Hs mRNA for GTP-binding protein 3 H.sapiens mRNA for RNA polymerise II 140 kDa subunit 3 Homo Sapiens ribosomal protein L30 mRNA

3 Human ribosomal protein S 17 mRNA

Homo sapiens cDNA /clone=MEC-222 /gb=X84721 lgi=673398 /ug=Hs.115716 /len=558 3 Homo Sapiens plex subunit p21-Arc (ARC21) Arp2/3 protein mRNA
com 3 Human cytoplasmic hain 1 (hdlc 1 ) mRNA
dynein light c 3 Human ribosomal protein S3a mRNA

3 Human mRNA
for heat shock protein hsp86 2 Homo Sapiens Muncl3 mRNA

2 Human translational initiation factor 2 beta subunit (e1F-2-beta) mRNA

2 Human mRNA
for potential laminin-binding protein 2 Human cyclophilin-related processed pseudogene 2 Homo sapiens ribosomal protein S20 (RPS20) mRNA

2 Human acidic ribosomal phosphoprotein P 1 mRNA

2 Human ribosomal protein S 13 (RPS
13) mRNA

2 Novel 2 Homo Sapiens cDNA /clone=IMAGE:979232 2 Homo Sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=81477 2 Human intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) mRNA

2 Human mRNA
for ribosomal protein 2 Human mRNA
for carboxyl methyltransferase 2 Human mRNA
for cytoskeletal gamma-actin 2 Homo sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=626635 2 Human nucleophosmin mRNA

2 Human ribosomal protein L 10 mRna 2 Novel 2 Y box binding protein-1 (YB-1) mRNA

2 Human guanylate binding protein isoform I (GBP-2) mRNA

2 Homo Sapiens cyclin D3 (CCND3) mRNA

2 Novel 2 Homo sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=IMAGE:1474218 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) No. CopiesDescription 2 Homo piens Ubiquitin mRNA sequence Sa 2 Human bosomal protein L7 ri 2 Human phosphotyrosine independent Iigand p62 for the Lck domain mRNA

Homo sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone Total singlets:

Total contigs:

Total seq reads in contigs:

Total sags to be searched:

Table 6 No. Copies L ascription 77 Human mi~.'~A
for p;:ut:.r 4ytokine 21 (HC21) 31 Human gene for tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) 27 Human insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-3 gene 26 Human alpha gene 23 Human mRNA
for macrophage inflammatory protein-2beta (MIP2beta) 20 Human cytokine gene 20 H.sapiens gene for spermidine/spermine N1-acetyltransferase 20 Human gene for melanoma growth stimulatory activity (MGSA) 17 Human ferritin H chain mRNA

13 Novel 13 Human adipocyte lipid-binding protein 12 Human interleukin 8 (IL8) gene 9 Homo sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=73864 8 Human ATL-derived PMA-responsive (APR) peptide mRNA

8 Human ATL-derived PMA-responsive (APR) peptide mRNA

7 Human cell surface glycoprotein mRNA

7 Haapiens gene -7 Human hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) gene 6 Human tumor necrosis factor-inducible (TSG-6) mRNA
fragment 6 Human adenosine receptor (A2) gene Human phatidylinositol 3-kinase catalytic subunit phos p110delta Mrna 4 Human BAC clone no function 4 Homo Sapiens adenosine triphosphatase mRNA

4 Human mRNA
(3'-fragment) for (2'-5') oligo A synthetase E

4 Genomic sequence no function 2 Human type IV collagenase mRNA

2 Human ribosomal protein S17 mRNA

2 Homo sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=IMAGE:1459553 2 Human interleukin 1-beta (IL1B) gene Example 8 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Stimulated a'n_d Llnst,'_m~lated THP-1 Cells (Experiment: Comp 15) In a separate experiment, cDNA from stimulated and unstimulated THP-1 cells was prepared for competitive hybridization as described in Example 6.
The reference DNA population was prepared as described in Example 6, except that the Comp 15 bead library consisted of 2,570,000 beads, with a complexity of 1 million clones from the THP-1 stimulated library and the THP-1 unstimuiated library (50% of each). 13,988 beads (.87%), the brightest CYS off the 1:1 diagonal, were sorted.
17,393 beads (1.08%), the brightest 8110 off the 1:1 diagonal, were sorted.
The identified sequences are listed in Tables 7 and 8.

SUBSTfTUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Table 7 No. Copies Description - -25 H.sapiens mRNA
for 23 kD
highly basic protein 17 Homo Sapiens ribosomal protein L30 Mrna 16 H.sapiens mRNA
for ribosomal protein S

15 H.sapiens mRNA
for ribosomal protein L6 14 L44-like ribosomalprotein (L44L) and FTP3 (FTP3) genes 11 Homo sapiens N (MEFV) mRNA
PYRI

9 Human cathepsin G mRNA

8 Human mRNA
for ribosomal protein S

8 Novel 8 H.sapiens mRNA
for ribosomal protein L37a 8 Novel 8 H.sapiens mRNA
for ribosomal protein L26 8 H.sapiens mRNA
for translationally controlled tumor protein p21 Homology 8 Human deoxyuridine triphosphatase (DUT) Mrna 8 Human growth factor independence-1 (Gfi-1) mRNA

7 Human mRNA
for ribosomal protein L39 7 Human ribosomal protein L10 mRNA

6 Human ribosomal protein L9 mRNA, complete cds. 5/96 6 Homo Sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=IMAGE:1862607 /clone end=3' _ /gb=AI053436 /ug=Hs.135355 /len=138 6 Human gene for catalase Weak Homology H.sapiens mRNA
for ribosomal protein L7 5 Homo Sapiens (clone cori-1c15) S29 ribosomal protein mRNA

5 Human mRNA
for HBp 1 5 H.sapiens mRNA
for NEFA protein 5 Novel 5 Human mRNA
for potential laminin-binding protein 4 Human ribosomal protein S
16 mRNA

4 Homo Sapiens cDNA /clon~IMAGE:1118473 /gb=AA603101 /gi=2436962 /ug=Hs.14214 /len~21 4 H.sapiens mRNA
for large subunit of ribosomal protein L21 4 Human HMG-17 gene for non-histone chromosomal protein HMG-17 4 Human ribosomal protein LS
mRNA

4 H.sapiens Uba80 mRNA for ubiquitin.

4 Human interferon-inducible mRNA

3 Homo sapiens mRNA for ribosomal protein L14 3 H.sapiens ipS8 gene for ribosomal protein S8 3 Homo sapiens monocyte/macrophage Ig-related receptor MIR-7 (MIR

cl-7) mRlVA

3 Homo Sapiens U2 snRNP auxiliary factor small subunit 3 Homo sapiens 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase mRNA

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) No. Copies Description ~~~~

3 Novel 3 Homo sapiens aflatoxin aldehyde reductase AFAR
mRNA

3 Homo Sapiens ribosomal protein Ll8a mRNA

3 Homo sapiens histone HZA.F/Z variant (H2AV) mRNA

3 Human ribosomal protein L27a mRNA

3 H.sapiens gene for ribosomal protein L38 3 Homo sapiens cDNA /clone=IMAGE:1089890 /gb=AA584384 / gi=2368993 /ug=Hs.100437 /len=434 3 Human ribosomal protein S 17 mRNA

3 Human cyclophilin-related processed pseudogene 3 H.sapiens MUCSB gene, rearranged DNA fragment 2 Homo sapiens gene for ribosomal protein L41 2 Homo sapiens glia maturation factor beta mRNA

2 Novel 2 Human ribosomal protein L7a 2 Human ribosomal protein S 13 (RPS 13) mRNA

2 Homo sapiens cDNA /clone=1MAGE:979448 /gb=AA523303 / gi=2264015 /ug=Hs.15476 /len=640 2 Human profilin mRNA

2 Homo sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=1391189 /clone / end=3' gb=AA781132 /ug=Hs.110803 /len=658 2 Human mRNA for mitochondria) ATP synthase (F1-ATPase) alpha subunit 2 Human mRNA for cytoskeletal gamma-actin 2 Human mRNA for ribosomal protein L32 2 H.sapiens beta-sarcoglycan gene 2 Human mRNA for 26S proteasome subunit p31 2 H.sapiens mRNA for ribosomal protein SlSa 2 Novel 2 Novel 2 Homo sapiens IgE receptor beta chain (HTm4) mRNA

2 Human HuR RNA binding protein (HuR) mRNA

2 human alpha-tubulin mRNA

2 H.sapiens mRNA for elongations factor Tu-mitochondria) 2 Homo Sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=550365 /clone end=3' /gb=AA098869 /gi=1644973 /ug=Hs.103088 /len=526 2 Homo Sapiens cDNA, 3' end /clone=448402 /clone end=3' /gb=AA777529 /ug=Hs.11355 /len=529 2 Human mRNA for proteasome subunit HsC 10-II

2 Homo sapiens RCL (Rcl) mRNA

2 Homo Sapiens clone DT1P1A10 mRNA, CAG

2 Novel 2 Human pmthymosin-alpha gene Total singlets: 213 Total contigs: 76 Total seq reads in contigs: 366 Total seqs to be searched: 717 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) Table 8 No. Copies Description -'-' --188 Human gene for tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) 61 Cytochrome H.sapiens mRNA
for uridine phosphorylase 27 HuEST

14 Human 11 tumor necrosis factor-inducible (TSG-6) mRNA
fragment Homo Sapiens Chromosone 21 clone 8 Novel 6 Novel 6 Novel -Gene 5 Human beta gene 4 Adenosine receptor 3 Human Mitocondrial DNA

3 Human spermidine/spermine Nl-acetyltransferase (SSAT) gene 3 H.sapiens mRNA
for 23 kD
highly basic protein 3 HuEST

3 Human pha inducible protein tumor A20 mRNA
necrosis factor al 2 Human permine-acetyltransferase (SSAT) spermidine/s Nl gene 2 Human brane plasma Ca2+
mem pumping ATPase mRNA

2 Cathepsin L

oncogene MIP2-beta 2 Small inducible cytokine A4 (homologous to mouse Mip-lb) 2 GR02 gene onco MIP2-alpha 2 Human alpha gene 2 Interleukin Total singlets:

Total contigs:

Total seq reads in contigs:

Total seqs to be searched:

Example 9 Isolation of Rare Genes From ~ imLlatP~ THP-1 Cellc (Experiment: Cot 3) In this example, rare genes are isolated from stimulated THP-1 cells by collecting beads of lower relative intensity. Bead and probe libraries were constructed from mRNA prepared from phorbol ester treated THP-1 cultured cells.
Six bead libraries (160K complexity) were loaded twice to BP 11 combitagged beads.
A total of 1,260,000 beads were sorted. The beads were filled in and ligated.
The top SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) strand of the beads was stripped with 2.5 ml 150 mM NaOH washes at room temperature for 15 minutes with mild vortexing. The beads were washed twice in 0.5 ml of 4X SSC/0.1% SDS. 100,000 beads were hybridized overnight with 50 ng of CYS labelled probe from stimulated THP-1 cells in 4X SSC/0.1% SDS at 65°. The recovered samples were rinsed 2 times with IX SSC/0.1% SDS, resuspended in 0.5 ml of 1X SSC/0.1% SDS, and washed at 65°C for 15 minutes. The beads were then rinsed in O.1X SSC/0.1% SDS and washed at 55°C in O.1X SSC/0.1% SDS for IS
minutes. 98,880 clones were analyzed and sorted by flow cytometry. Sample CT003E contained I26 clones which barely hybridized any CYS probe. Sample CT003F contained 1557 clones that did not find enough probe to migrate to the diagonal. These beads contained the Least frequent copies in our probe library. 50 clones from each gate (see Figure 7) were picked for sequence analysis. The identified sequences are Listed in Table 9.
Table 9 THP-1 lire Ctenee GenBank No. Copies _ Descripton Identifier 2 Alu primary transcript U67828 I AMP deaminase HSAMPD3B

-I clone 23933 mRNA HSU79273 7 EST AA9052i2 1 EST (88% homology) AA626040 8 EST (contains Alu repeat) AA129219 9 EST (contains Alu repeat) AI085719 1 EST (contains Alu repeat) W07654 1 EST (Sau3A not present) AA553627 3 ferritin H chain ~E~

1 I L1 (3 HLJMIL1BA

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) GenBank No. Copies Descripton Identifier 1 _ HUMKG1DD
ICIAA0098 gene mRNA ~

1 mito. cyt oxidase subunit I pseudogeneAF035429 1 Mitochondrial genome MIHSGENOM

1 NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase AF044959 subunit 2 no match 1 no match 1 only 12 bases I only 12 bases 1 only 13 bases 1 Pyruvate kinase, M gene for M1-typeHSPKM12 & M2-type 4 TNF a HSTNFR

7 TNF type I recept. assoc. prot.%DNAseHSU12595/D831 1 type IV collagenase HUM4COLA

1 Ubiquitin hydrolyzing enzyme AF022789 I (UBHI) 1 VASP gene HSVASP413 1 Apolipoprotein C-II HSAPOC2G

1 clone s153 mRNA fragment HUMFRCC

cytoskeleta~, r actin HSACTCGR

1 elongation factor 1 a HSEF1AC

1 EST (contains Alu repeat) H08741 1 EST (85% homology; contains Alu,AA704393 t CACA
ract) 1 EST (86% homology; contains Alu)H60533 1 EST (88% homology) AA228701 2 EST (contains Alu repeat) AI085719 1 EST (contains Alu repeat) AA713891 1 EST (rat) AI136745 1 ferritin H chain ~E~

1 genomic (72 bp; 88% homology) HSAC002082 1 I L1 ~i HUMIL1BA

1 I nterferon y receptor accessory HSU05877 factor 1 2 mito. cyt oxidase subunit I pseudogeneAF035429 1 n o match I n o match SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) GenBank No. Copies Descript_on _Identifler 1 no match (40 bp) 1 p65, rat (partial match to hu RRP65 synaptotagmin I) 1 rat a tubulin {100% hom to rat; RNATUBZ
78% to human) 1 Ribophorin II HSRIBIIR

3 Ribosomal protein S3 HSU14991 12 sec61-complex (3 subunit HUMSEC61B

1 TNF a HSTNFR

1 type IV collagenase HUM4COLA

Example 10 Bead and probe libraries were constructed from commercially available mRNA from bone marrow. Six bead libraries (160K complexity) were loaded twice to BP 12 combitagged beads. They formed mixes 216, 217, 218, and 219. A total of 3,150,000 beads were sorted. The beads were filled in and ligated. The top strand of mix 217 was stripped off with NaOH. The CTl bone marrow probe was linearly amplified with CY5 nucleotides and then purified. 200,000 beads were hybridized with 5 and 50 ng of probe overnight at 65°. 180,000 clones from the 5 nG
hybridization were interrogated and sorted. Sample CT001 contained 996 clones which barely hybridized any CYS probe. CT002 sample contained 1988 clones that did not find enough probe to migrate to the diagonal. These beads contained the least frequent copies in our probe library. 200 clones firm each gate (see Figure 8) were picked for sequence analysis.
Ezampte 11 FAGS A_n_al_ysis of DiiTerenda1,13r_Fgpressed Genes finm Bead and probe libraries were constructed from mRNA prepared from muscle tissue in two states: glucose normal (basal) and glucose starved (clamp). Six bead libraries (160K complexity) finm the glucose normal state were loaded to BP 12 combitagged beads to form mix 237. A total of 810,000 beads were sorted. The beads were filled in and ligated. The beads were digested with DpnII enzyme and ligated to an adapter with FITC on the strand opposite to the covalently attached DNA

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) strand. The top strand of mix 217 was stripped off with NaOH. The CT1 glucose normal probe (13,510,000 complexity) was linearly amplified with CYS
nucleotides and then purified. The CT2 glucose starred pmbe (7,132,000 complexity) was linearly amplified with 8110 nucleotides and then purified. 250,000 beads were hybridized with Sug of each probe overnight at 65°. 230,000 clones were interrogated and sorted. Sample UP001 contained 968 clones which were upregulated. Sample DN001 contained 1652 clones which were down regulated. 1000 clones from each gate (see Figure 9) were picked for sequence analysis. The identified sequences are listed in Tables 10 and 11.

CA 02317695 2000-07-04 $VB$$HEET (RULE 26) Table 10 No. CopiesDescription 23 Human mRNA for slow skeletal troponin C

27 Human alkali myosin light chain 1 Mrna 14 Human messenger RNA for beta-globin 13 Human lymphocytic antigen CD59/MEM43 mRNA

P6=cytochrome c oxidase subunit Vlc homolog 8 H.sapiens mRNA homologous to mouse P21 mRNA

5 Human SPARC/osteonectin mRNA

5 3', mRNA sequence 4 Pan troglodytes beta-2-microglobulin mRNA

4 reductase 4 Homo sapiens gene for ribosomal protein L41 3 Homo sapiens ribosomal protein L30 mRNA

3 IMAGE: 1388067 2 ni65cOl.s1 NCl_CGAP_Prl2 Homo sapiens cDNA
clone 1MAGE:981696 2 Homo sapiens mRNA for K1AA0454 protein 2 Human gene for cardiac beta myosin heavy chain Table 11 No. CopiesDescription 4 Human mitochondrion cytochrome b gene 4 Homo sapiens sarcosin mRNA

4 laminin receptor homolog 3 H.sapiens mRNA for 23 kD highly basic protein 3 Human EN03 mRNA for beta-enolase 3 alpha-tropomyosin _ 3 ~pha B-crystallin 3 Human mRNA for muscle phosphofructokinase 2 Baboon beta-myosin heavy-chain mRNA

2 Human mRNA 3'-fragment for glycogen phosphorylase 2 Human ribosomal LS protein mRNA

2 H.sapiens mRNA for ribosomal protein L37a 2 Human cytochrome c oxidase subunit VII (COXB) mRNA

SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 28) All publications and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
The invention now being fully described, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that many changes and modifications can be made thereto without departing from the spirit or scope of the appended claims.

SUBSTmJTE SHEET (RULE 26) ttSequence Listing <110> Albrecht, Glenn Brenner, Sydney DuBridge, Robert 8.
<120> Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes <130> 822-02 <140> US 09/130.546 <141> 1998-08-06 <150> US 09/005,222 <151> 1998-O1-09 <160> 25 <170> Microsoft Word 5.1 <210> 1 <211> 89 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 1 agaattcggg ccttaattaa dddddddddd dddddddddd dddddddddd 50 ddgggcccgc ataagtcttc nnnnnnggat ccgagtgat e9 <210> 2 <211> 41 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 2 gacatgctgc attgagacga ttcttttttt tttttttttt v 41 1.
CA 02317695 2000-0~-04 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) <210> 3 <211> 52 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 3 gacatgctgc attgagacga ttcttttttt tttttttttt vnnnngatcn 50 nn . 52 <210> 4 <211> 37 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220->
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 4 gcattgagac gattcttttt tttttttttt ttvnnnn 37 <210> S
<211> 73 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 5 ttaattaagg addddddddd dddddddddd dddddddddd dddgggcccg 50 2.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) cataagtctt cnnnnnngga tcc ~3 <210> 6 <211> 63 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<22i>
<222>
<223>
<400> 6 ccchhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhtcctt aattaactgg 50 tctcactgtc gca 63 <210> 7 <211> 18 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 7 gatcacgagc tgccagtc 18 <210> 8 <211> 22 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
3.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) <400> 8 agtgaattcg ggccttaatt as 22 <210> 9 <211> 32 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 9 ctacccgcgg ccgcggtcga ctctagagga tc 32 <210> 10 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 10 annntacagc tgcatccctt ggcgctgagg 30 <210> 11 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
4.
CA o 2 317 6 9 5 2 0 0 0 - o ~ - 0 4 SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26~

<400> 11 nanntacagc tgcatccctg ggcctgtaag 30 <210> 12 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence c220>
<221>
<222>
<223 >
<400> 12 cnnntacagc tgcatccctt gacgggtctc 30 <210> 13 c211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<22I>
<222>
<223>
<400> 13 ncnntacagc tgcatccctg cccgcacagt 30 c210> 14 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
c221>
c222>
<223>
5.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) <400> 14 gnnntacagc tgcatccctt cgcctcggac 30 <210> 15 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 15 ngnntacagc tgcatccctg atccgctagc 30 <210> 16 <211> 30 <212~ DNA
.<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 16 tnnntacagc tgcatccctt ccgaacccgc 30 <210> 17 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
6.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 28) <400> 17 ntnntacagc tgcatccctg agggggatag 30 <210> 18 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 18 nnantacagc tgcatccctt cccgctacac 30 <210> 19 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 19 nnnatacagc tgcatccctg actccccgag 30 <210> 20 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
7.
CA 0 2 317 6 9 5 2 0 0 0 - o ~ - 0 4 SUBST'ITIITE SHEET (RULE 26) <400> 20 nncntacagc tgcatccctg tgttgcgcgg 30 <210> 21 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 21 nnnctacagc tgcatccctc tacagcagcg 30 <210> 22 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 22 nngntacagc tgcatccctg tcgcgtcgtt 30 <210> 23 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
8.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) <400> 23 nnngtacagc tgcatccctc ggagcaacct 30 <210> 24 <2I1> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
<222>
<223>
<400> 24 nntntacagc tgcatccctg gtgaccgtag 30 <210> 25 <211> 30 <212> DNA
.<213> Artificial Sequence <220>
<221>
~<222 >
<223>
<400> 25 nnnttacagc tgcatccctc ccctgtcgga 30 9.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26)

Claims (60)

We claim:
1. A method of analyzing differential gene expression, comprising:
providing a reference population of nucleic acid sequences attached to separate solid phase supports in clonal subpopulations;
providing a population of polynucleotides of expressed genes from a first cell or tissue source and at least one population of polynucleotides of expressed genes from a different cell or tissue source, the polynucleotides of expressed genes from each source comprising a light-generating label different from the label comprised by polynucleotides of any other source;
competitively hybridizing the populations of polynucleotides of expressed genes from each source with the reference nucleic acid population to form duplexes between the nucleic acid sequences of the reference nucleic acid population and the polynucleotides of each source such that the polynucleotides are present in duplexes on each of the solid phase supports in ratios directly related to the relative expression of their corresponding genes in the sources; and detecting a relative optical signal generated by the light-generating labels of the duplexes attached thereto.
2. The method of Claim 1, wherein said nucleic acid sequences are DNA
sequences.
3. The method of Claim 2, wherein said step of providing said reference population further includes:
forming at least one population of tag-cDNA conjugates from mRNA
extracted from at least one of said sources and a repertoire of oligonucleotide tag;
removing a sample of the tag-cDNA conjugates; and amplifying the tag-cDNA conjugates of the sample.
4. The method of Claim 3, wherein said populations of tag-cDNA
conjugates are formed from mRNA extracted from each of said sources, the method further comprising combining said populations of tag-cDNA conjugates from each of said sources prior to removing said sample.
5. The method of Claim 4, wherein said sample is sufficiently small relative to said total tag-cDNA conjugates that substantially all different cDNAs have different oligonucleotide tags.
6. The method of Claim 5, wherein said step of providing said reference population further includes attaching said tag-cDNA conjugates of said sample to said separate solid phase supports by specifically hybridizing said oligonucleotide tags of said tag-cDNA conjugates to their respective complements.
7. The method of Claim 6, wherein said step of amplifying comprises replicating said tag-cDNA conjugates of said sample in a polymerase chain reaction.
8. The method of Claim 6, wherein said step of amplifying comprises replicating said tag-cDNA conjugates of said sample by inserting said tag-cDNA
conjugates into a cloning vector and transfecting a host cell therewith.
9. The method of Claim 6, wherein said sample includes a number of oligonucleotide tags less than or equal to one percent of said oligonucleotide tags in said repertoire.
10. The method of Claim 2, wherein said reference DNA population is derived from said expressed genes of all of said sources being analyzed.
11. The method of Claim 2, further comprising sorting each solid phase support according to said relative optical signal.
12. The method of Claim 2, wherein said different light-generating labels are different fluorescent labels.
13. The method of Claim 12, wherein said population of polynucleotides of expressed genes are populations of cDNAs.
14. The method of Claim 13, further comprising the steps of:
accumulating each said solid phase support having said relative optical signal with a value within one or more predetermined ranges of values corresponding to a difference in gene expression among said sources; and identifying said polynucleotides on each of said solid supports by determining a nucleotide sequence of a portion of each of said polynucleotides.
15. The method of Claim 14, wherein said relative optical signal is a ratio of fluorescence intensities and wherein said populations of polynucleotides are from two sources.
16. The method of Claim 15, wherein said portion of said polynucleotides is a sequence of at least ten nucleotides.
17. The method of Claim 15, wherein said step of identifying includes simultaneous sequencing of at least ten thousand of said polynucleotides by massively parallel signature sequencing.
18. A method of isolating polynucleotides derived from genes differentially expressed in a plurality of different cells or tissues, the method comprising the steps of:
providing a reference DNA population of DNA sequences attached to separate microparticles in clonal subpopulations;
providing a population of polynucleotides derived from genes expressed in each of the plurality of different cells or tissues, each polynucleotide having a light-generating label capable of generating an optical signal indicative of the cells or tissues from which it is derived;
competitively hybridizing the populations of polynucleotides of genes expressed in each of the plurality of different cells or tissues with the reference DNA
population to form duplexes between the DNA sequences of the reference DNA
population and polynucleotides from each of the different cells or tissues such that the polynucleotides are present in duplexes on each of the microparticles in ratios directly related to the relative expression of their corresponding genes in the different cells or tissues; and isolating polynucleotides corresponding to genes differentially expressed in the different cells or tissues by sorting microparticles in accordance with the optical signals generated by the populations of polynucleotides hybridized thereto.
19. The method of Claim 18, wherein said reference DNA population is derived from genes expressed in the plurality of different cells or tissues being analyzed.
20. The method of Claim 19, wherein said plurality of different cells or tissues is two and wherein said optical signal is a fluorescent signal.
21. The method of Claim 20, wherein said populations of polynucleotides are labeled with different fluorescent labels.
22. The method of Claim 21, wherein said populations of polynucleotides are populations of cDNAs.
23. The method of Claim 22, wherein said step of competitively hybridizing includes providing hybridization conditions which result in substantially all of said duplexes being perfectly matched duplexes.
24. The method of Claim 23, wherein said step of isolating includes sorting said microparticles in accordance with the ratio of fluorescence intensities generated by said populations of cDNAs hybridized thereto.
25. The method of Claim 24, wherein said step of isolating includes sorting said microparticle with a fluorescence-activated cell sorter.
26. The method of Claim 25, further including the step of identifying said isolated cDNAs by determining a nucleotide sequence of a portion of each said isolated cDNA.
27. A method of determining relative abundance of gene products, comprising:
providing a reference DNA population of DNA sequences attached to separate solid phase supports in clonal subpopulations;
providing a population of polynucleotides derived from genes expressed in at least one cell or tissue source, the polynucleotides having a light-generating label;
hybridizing the polynucleotides with the reference DNA population to form duplexes between the DNA sequences of the reference DNA population and the polynucleotides; and sorting each solid phase support according to the optical signal generated by the light-generating labels of the duplexes attached thereto, wherein relative abundance of the gene products is correlated with the relative level of intensity of the optical signals obtained from the duplexes, wherein a lower intensity is indicative of a rarer gene product.
28. The method of Claim 27, further comprising isolating solid phase supports having lower relative intensities, wherein said isolated solid phase supports comprise at most about 5% of the total solid phase supports provided.
29. The method of Claim 28, wherein said isolated solid phase supports comprise at most about 0.5% of the total supports provided.
30. A method of isolating polynucleotides according to the abundance of the nucleic acid sequences from which they are derived, comprising:
providing a reference DNA population of DNA sequences attached to separate microparticles in clonal subpopulations;

providing a population of polynucleotides derived from nucleic acid sequences present in the cells of at least one cell or tissue source, each polynucleotide having a light-generating label capable of generating an optical signal;
competitively hybridizing the population of polynucleotides with the reference DNA population to form duplexes between the DNA sequences of the reference DNA
population and the polynucleotides, the hybridizing being conducted under conditions which provide a hybridization rate proportionate to the abundance of the polynucleotide wherein less abundant polynucleotides would remain unhybridized;
sorting the polynucleotides into a hybridized population and an unhybridized population.
31. The method of Claim 30, wherein said polynucleotides are hybridized with said reference DNA population under conditions such that said unhybridized population comprises polynucleotides derived from rare gene products.
32. The method of Claim 30, wherein said polynucleotides are hybridized with said reference DNA population under conditions such that said unhybridized population is substantially enriched in polynucleotides derived from nonrepetitive nucleic acid sequences.
33. A composition comprising a mixture of microparticles, each microparticle having a population of identical single stranded nucleic acid molecules attached thereto, the single stranded nucleic acid molecules being different on each microparticle and comprising an oligonucleotide tag in juxtaposition with a polynucleotide derived from an mRNA of at least one cell or tissue source.
34. The composition of Claim 33, wherein said nucleic acid molecules are DNA.
35. The composition of Claim 34, wherein said polynucleotides are derived from a plurality of cell or tissue sources.
36. The composition of Claim 35, wherein said mixture comprises at least 100 different microparticles.
37. The composition of Claim 35, wherein said mixture comprises at least 1000 different microparticles.
38. The composition of Claim 35, wherein said mixture comprises at least 10 4 different microparticles.
39. The composition of Claim 35, wherein said oligonucleotide tag is about 12 to about 60 nucleotides in length.
40. The composition of Claim 35, wherein said oligonucleotide tag is about 18 to about 40 nucleotides in length.
41. The composition of Claim 35, wherein said oligonucleotide tag is about 25 to about 40 nucleotides in length.
42. A composition comprising a mixture of microparticles, each microparticle having a population of identical single stranded nucleic acid molecules attached thereto, the single stranded nucleic acid molecules being different on each microparticle and each of the different nucleic acid molecules comprising a polynucleotide encoding a protein selected from the group consisting of cell cycle proteins, signal transduction pathway proteins, oncogene gene products, tumor suppressors, kinases, phosphatases, transcription factors, growth factor receptors, growth factors, extracellular matrix proteins, proteases, cytoskeletal proteins, membrane receptors, Rb pathway proteins, p53 pathway proteins, proteins involved in metabolism, proteins involved in cellular responses to stress, cytokines, proteins involved in DNA damage and repair, and proteins involved in apoptosis.
43. The composition of Claim 42, wherein each of said nucleic acid molecules further comprises an oligonucleotide tag in juxtaposition with said polynucleotide and positioned between said microparticle and said polynucleotide.
44. The composition of claim 43, wherein each of said microparticles comprises a set of oligonucleotide tags having a sequence different from the oligonucleotide tags of any other microparticle in said composition.
45. The composition of Claim 42, wherein said polynucleotides encode kinases.
46. The composition of Claim 42, wherein said polynucleotides encode cell-cycle proteins.
47. The composition of Claim 42, wherein said polynucleotides encode signal transduction pathway proteins.
48. The composition of Claim 42, wherein said polynucleotides encode proteins involved in apoptosis.
49. The composition of Claim 42, wherein said polynucleotides encode proteins involved in metabolism.
50. A kit for preparing a reference population, comprising:
a plurality of microparticles having oligonucleotide tag complements attached thereto, the oligonucleotide tag complement sequence being different on each microparticle.
51. The kit of Claim 50, further comprising a plurality of vectors comprising a library of tags, the tags having sequences complementary to said tag complements.
52. The kit of Claim 51, further comprising a population of polynucleotides from at least one cell or tissue source.
53. The kit of Claim 52, wherein said polynucleotides are cDNAs.
54. The kit of Claim 52, wherein said population of polynucleotides is contained in a container separate from said plurality of microparticles.
55. The kit of Claim 51, further comprising at least one reagent for preparing said reference population.
56. A kit for analyzing differentially expressed genes, comprising:
a mixture of microparticles, each microparticle having a population of identical single stranded nucleic acid molecules attached thereto, the single stranded nucleic acid molecules being different on each microparticle and comprising polynucleotide derived from an mRNA of at least one cell or tissue source.
57. The kit of Claim 56, wherein each of said nucleic acid molecules further comprises an oligonucleotide tag in juxtaposition with said polynucleotide and positioned between said microparticle and said polynucleotide.
58. The kit of Claim 56, further comprising printed instructions for use in analyzing differentially expressed genes.
59. The kit of Claim 56, further comprising a container.
60. The kit of Claim 56, further comprising a population of cDNA
molecules from at least one of said cell or tissue sources.
CA002317695A 1998-01-09 1999-01-08 Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes Abandoned CA2317695A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US522298A 1998-01-09 1998-01-09
US09/005,222 1998-08-06
US09/130,546 US6265163B1 (en) 1998-01-09 1998-08-06 Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes
US09/130,546 1998-08-06
PCT/US1999/000666 WO1999035293A2 (en) 1998-01-09 1999-01-08 Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2317695A1 true CA2317695A1 (en) 1999-07-15

Family

ID=26674091

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002317695A Abandoned CA2317695A1 (en) 1998-01-09 1999-01-08 Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes

Country Status (10)

Country Link
US (2) US6265163B1 (en)
EP (1) EP1054999B1 (en)
KR (1) KR100433782B1 (en)
AT (1) ATE322556T1 (en)
AU (1) AU754929B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2317695A1 (en)
DE (1) DE69930729D1 (en)
NO (1) NO20003531L (en)
PL (1) PL342114A1 (en)
WO (1) WO1999035293A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (74)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USRE43097E1 (en) 1994-10-13 2012-01-10 Illumina, Inc. Massively parallel signature sequencing by ligation of encoded adaptors
US6654505B2 (en) * 1994-10-13 2003-11-25 Lynx Therapeutics, Inc. System and apparatus for sequential processing of analytes
US6406848B1 (en) 1997-05-23 2002-06-18 Lynx Therapeutics, Inc. Planar arrays of microparticle-bound polynucleotides
US6458530B1 (en) 1996-04-04 2002-10-01 Affymetrix Inc. Selecting tag nucleic acids
US6743578B1 (en) * 1998-12-18 2004-06-01 The Regents Of The University Of California Method for the detection of specific nucleic acid sequences by polymerase nucleotide incorporation
US6815163B1 (en) * 1998-12-23 2004-11-09 Rutgers, The State University Methods and kits for screening nucleic acid duplex stability
US7468250B2 (en) * 1998-12-23 2008-12-23 Rutgers, The State University Of New Jersey Methods and kits for screening nucleic acid duplex stability
GB9905807D0 (en) * 1999-03-12 1999-05-05 Amersham Pharm Biotech Uk Ltd Analysis of differential gene expression
WO2000079009A2 (en) * 1999-06-22 2000-12-28 Invitrogen Corporation Improved primers and methods for the detection and discrimination of nucleic acids
US7013221B1 (en) * 1999-07-16 2006-03-14 Rosetta Inpharmatics Llc Iterative probe design and detailed expression profiling with flexible in-situ synthesis arrays
GB9917027D0 (en) * 1999-07-20 1999-09-22 Affibody Technology Sweeden Ab In vitro selection and optional identification of polypeptides using solid support carriers
US6834122B2 (en) * 2000-01-22 2004-12-21 Kairos Scientific, Inc. Visualization and processing of multidimensional data using prefiltering and sorting criteria
US6780594B2 (en) 2000-09-25 2004-08-24 Schering Aktiengesellschaft Method for in vitro diagnosis of endometriosis
DE10048633A1 (en) * 2000-09-25 2002-04-18 Schering Ag Method for in vitro diagnosis of endometriosis
AU2001293163A1 (en) 2000-09-27 2002-04-08 Lynx Therapeutics, Inc. Method for determining relative abundance of nucleic acid sequences
EP1377827A2 (en) * 2001-04-10 2004-01-07 NMI Naturwissenschaftliches und Medizinisches Institut an der Universität Tübingen in Reutlingen Stiftung Bürgerlichen Rechts Method for determining analyte molecules in a sample
CA2457579A1 (en) * 2001-08-14 2003-02-27 Mount Sinai School Of Medicine Use of intrinsic reporters of cell signaling for high content drug profiling and toxicity screening
US20030165859A1 (en) 2001-10-23 2003-09-04 Invitrogen Corporation Primers and methods for the detection and discrimination of nucleic acids
US20030170700A1 (en) * 2002-01-09 2003-09-11 Lynx Therapeutics, Inc. Secreted and cell surface polypeptides affected by cholesterol and uses thereof
US20030166026A1 (en) * 2002-01-09 2003-09-04 Lynx Therapeutics, Inc. Identification of specific biomarkers for breast cancer cells
AU2003238702A1 (en) * 2002-06-12 2003-12-31 Kabushiki Kaisha Dnaform Method of utilizing the 5'end of transcribed nucleic acid regions for cloning and analysis
US20040086912A1 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-05-06 Shujun Luo Method for detecting foreign DNA in a host Genome
GB0218080D0 (en) * 2002-08-03 2002-09-11 Epistem Ltd Analysis of biological samples
GB0218087D0 (en) * 2002-08-03 2002-09-11 Epistem Ltd Analysis of biological samples
EP1582599A1 (en) * 2004-03-31 2005-10-05 Takara Bio Inc. Method for purifying microbeads
US20080102455A1 (en) * 2004-07-06 2008-05-01 Genera Biosystems Pty Ltd Method Of Detecting Aneuploidy
US7867703B2 (en) * 2004-08-26 2011-01-11 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Element defined sequence complexity reduction
EP3543357A1 (en) 2007-05-08 2019-09-25 Trustees of Boston University Chemical functionalization of solid-state nanopores and nanopore arrays and applications thereof
EP2395113A1 (en) 2007-06-29 2011-12-14 Population Genetics Technologies Ltd. Methods and compositions for isolating nucleic acid sequence variants
WO2009114185A2 (en) 2008-03-12 2009-09-17 The Rockefeller University Methods and compositions for translational profiling and molecular phenotyping
CN102159726A (en) * 2008-09-05 2011-08-17 生命科技公司 Methods and systems for nucleic acid sequencing validation, calibration and normalization
ES2555389T3 (en) 2009-03-30 2015-12-30 Illumina, Inc. Analysis of gene expression in individual cells
AU2010301128B2 (en) 2009-09-30 2014-09-18 Quantapore, Inc. Ultrafast sequencing of biological polymers using a labeled nanopore
US8835358B2 (en) 2009-12-15 2014-09-16 Cellular Research, Inc. Digital counting of individual molecules by stochastic attachment of diverse labels
US9169515B2 (en) 2010-02-19 2015-10-27 Life Technologies Corporation Methods and systems for nucleic acid sequencing validation, calibration and normalization
WO2013130674A1 (en) 2012-02-27 2013-09-06 Cellular Research, Inc. Compositions and kits for molecular counting
US9651539B2 (en) 2012-10-28 2017-05-16 Quantapore, Inc. Reducing background fluorescence in MEMS materials by low energy ion beam treatment
WO2014190322A2 (en) 2013-05-24 2014-11-27 Quantapore, Inc. Nanopore-based nucleic acid analysis with mixed fret detection
WO2015031691A1 (en) 2013-08-28 2015-03-05 Cellular Research, Inc. Massively parallel single cell analysis
US9885079B2 (en) 2014-10-10 2018-02-06 Quantapore, Inc. Nanopore-based polymer analysis with mutually-quenching fluorescent labels
WO2016065339A1 (en) 2014-10-24 2016-04-28 Quantapore, Inc. Efficient optical analysis of polymers using arrays of nanostructures
EP3259371B1 (en) 2015-02-19 2020-09-02 Becton, Dickinson and Company High-throughput single-cell analysis combining proteomic and genomic information
US9727810B2 (en) 2015-02-27 2017-08-08 Cellular Research, Inc. Spatially addressable molecular barcoding
CN107406888A (en) 2015-03-30 2017-11-28 赛卢拉研究公司 For combining the method and composition of bar coding
EP3286326A1 (en) 2015-04-23 2018-02-28 Cellular Research, Inc. Methods and compositions for whole transcriptome amplification
WO2016196229A1 (en) 2015-06-01 2016-12-08 Cellular Research, Inc. Methods for rna quantification
JP6940484B2 (en) 2015-09-11 2021-09-29 セルラー リサーチ, インコーポレイテッド Methods and compositions for library normalization
JP6417603B2 (en) 2016-01-27 2018-11-07 株式会社ダナフォーム Method for decoding nucleic acid base sequence corresponding to terminal region of RNA and method for analyzing DNA element
EP3452614B1 (en) 2016-05-02 2023-06-28 Becton, Dickinson and Company Accurate molecular barcoding
US10301677B2 (en) 2016-05-25 2019-05-28 Cellular Research, Inc. Normalization of nucleic acid libraries
CN109074430B (en) 2016-05-26 2022-03-29 贝克顿迪金森公司 Molecular marker counting adjustment method
US10640763B2 (en) 2016-05-31 2020-05-05 Cellular Research, Inc. Molecular indexing of internal sequences
US10202641B2 (en) 2016-05-31 2019-02-12 Cellular Research, Inc. Error correction in amplification of samples
KR101879329B1 (en) * 2016-06-13 2018-07-17 충북대학교 산학협력단 RNA-seq expression data simulation method for differential gene expression analysis, and recording medium thereof
JP2019522983A (en) 2016-07-05 2019-08-22 クアンタポール, インコーポレイテッド Optical-based nanopore sequencing
AU2017331459B2 (en) 2016-09-26 2023-04-13 Becton, Dickinson And Company Measurement of protein expression using reagents with barcoded oligonucleotide sequences
US10722880B2 (en) 2017-01-13 2020-07-28 Cellular Research, Inc. Hydrophilic coating of fluidic channels
CN110382708A (en) 2017-02-01 2019-10-25 赛卢拉研究公司 Selective amplification is carried out using blocking property oligonucleotides
CN110719959B (en) 2017-06-05 2021-08-06 贝克顿迪金森公司 Sample indexing for single cells
WO2019126209A1 (en) 2017-12-19 2019-06-27 Cellular Research, Inc. Particles associated with oligonucleotides
AU2019262048A1 (en) 2018-05-03 2020-11-12 Becton, Dickinson And Company High throughput multiomics sample analysis
JP7358388B2 (en) 2018-05-03 2023-10-10 ベクトン・ディキンソン・アンド・カンパニー Molecular barcoding at opposite transcript ends
WO2020072380A1 (en) 2018-10-01 2020-04-09 Cellular Research, Inc. Determining 5' transcript sequences
JP2022506546A (en) 2018-11-08 2022-01-17 ベクトン・ディキンソン・アンド・カンパニー Single-cell whole transcriptome analysis using random priming
US11492660B2 (en) 2018-12-13 2022-11-08 Becton, Dickinson And Company Selective extension in single cell whole transcriptome analysis
US11371076B2 (en) 2019-01-16 2022-06-28 Becton, Dickinson And Company Polymerase chain reaction normalization through primer titration
EP4242322A3 (en) 2019-01-23 2023-09-20 Becton, Dickinson and Company Oligonucleotides associated with antibodies
US11939622B2 (en) 2019-07-22 2024-03-26 Becton, Dickinson And Company Single cell chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing assay
WO2021092386A1 (en) 2019-11-08 2021-05-14 Becton Dickinson And Company Using random priming to obtain full-length v(d)j information for immune repertoire sequencing
EP4090763A1 (en) 2020-01-13 2022-11-23 Becton Dickinson and Company Methods and compositions for quantitation of proteins and rna
CN115605614A (en) 2020-05-14 2023-01-13 贝克顿迪金森公司(Us) Primers for immune repertoire profiling
US11932901B2 (en) 2020-07-13 2024-03-19 Becton, Dickinson And Company Target enrichment using nucleic acid probes for scRNAseq
EP4247967A1 (en) 2020-11-20 2023-09-27 Becton, Dickinson and Company Profiling of highly expressed and lowly expressed proteins
DE102021134368B4 (en) 2021-12-22 2023-09-21 Hochschule Reutlingen Körperschaft des öffentlichen Rechts Device and method for detecting marked tumor cells of a tissue in a flowing liquid

Family Cites Families (40)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
BE793185A (en) 1971-12-23 1973-04-16 Atomic Energy Commission APPARATUS FOR QUICKLY ANALYZING AND SORTING PARTICLES SUCH AS BIOLOGICAL CELLS
US4354114A (en) 1979-10-09 1982-10-12 Karnaukhov Valery N Apparatus for investigation of fluorescence characteristics of microscopic objects
US4812394A (en) 1983-10-18 1989-03-14 University Of California Flow cytomeric measurement of DNA and incorporated nucleoside analogs
US5206143A (en) 1985-11-01 1993-04-27 Smithkline Beecham Corporation Method and reagents for performing subset analysis using quantitative differences in fluorescence intensity
CA1291031C (en) 1985-12-23 1991-10-22 Nikolaas C.J. De Jaeger Method for the detection of specific binding agents and their correspondingbindable substances
US5721098A (en) 1986-01-16 1998-02-24 The Regents Of The University Of California Comparative genomic hybridization
US4791355A (en) 1986-10-21 1988-12-13 Coulter Electronics Inc. Particle analyzer for measuring the resistance and reactance of a particle
SE458968B (en) 1987-06-16 1989-05-22 Wallac Oy BIOSPECIFIC ANALYTICAL PROCEDURE FOR MULTIPLE ANALYTICS WHICH DO NOT INCLUDE PARTICULAR COATING AND LABELING WITH FLUORESCING LABEL SUBSTANCES
US4921805A (en) 1987-07-29 1990-05-01 Life Technologies, Inc. Nucleic acid capture method
US4942124A (en) 1987-08-11 1990-07-17 President And Fellows Of Harvard College Multiplex sequencing
US5104791A (en) 1988-02-09 1992-04-14 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Particle counting nucleic acid hybridization assays
GB8827160D0 (en) 1988-11-21 1988-12-29 Apothekernes Lab Detection & quantitative determination of rna & dna
US5237016A (en) 1989-01-05 1993-08-17 Siska Diagnostics, Inc. End-attachment of oligonucleotides to polyacrylamide solid supports for capture and detection of nucleic acids
EP0392546A3 (en) 1989-04-14 1991-09-11 Ro Institut Za Molekularnu Genetiku I Geneticko Inzenjerstvo Process for determination of a complete or a partial contents of very short sequences in the samples of nucleic acids connected to the discrete particles of microscopic size by hybridization with oligonucleotide probes
US5800992A (en) 1989-06-07 1998-09-01 Fodor; Stephen P.A. Method of detecting nucleic acids
US5143854A (en) 1989-06-07 1992-09-01 Affymax Technologies N.V. Large scale photolithographic solid phase synthesis of polypeptides and receptor binding screening thereof
US5173260A (en) 1990-09-17 1992-12-22 Eastman Kodak Company Beads fused to a test device support
CA2113350C (en) 1991-07-16 1999-03-23 Brian C. Lehnen Methods and compositions for simultaneous analysis of multiple analytes
DK0604552T3 (en) 1991-09-18 1997-08-04 Affymax Tech Nv Process for the synthesis of different assemblies of oligomers
MX9300492A (en) 1992-01-29 1994-07-29 Hitachi Chemical Co Ltd IMMOBILIZED SUPPORT OF NUCLEOTIDE AND METHOD FOR ITS PRODUCTION.
CA2130562A1 (en) 1992-02-19 1993-09-02 Alexander B. Chetverin Novel oligonucleotide arrays and their use for sorting, isolating, sequencing, and manipulating nucleic acids
FR2688283B1 (en) 1992-03-04 1997-05-30 Snecma DEVICE FOR SEALING BETWEEN A PRESSURIZED VOLUME AND A LUBRICATED VOLUME.
JP3311752B2 (en) 1992-07-02 2002-08-05 ソイニ,エルッキ Biospecific multivariable test method
US5629147A (en) * 1992-07-17 1997-05-13 Aprogenex, Inc. Enriching and identifying fetal cells in maternal blood for in situ hybridization
GB9315847D0 (en) * 1993-07-30 1993-09-15 Isis Innovation Tag reagent and assay method
US6045996A (en) 1993-10-26 2000-04-04 Affymetrix, Inc. Hybridization assays on oligonucleotide arrays
DE69535428T2 (en) 1994-02-14 2007-12-06 Smithkline Beecham Corp. Method for finding differentially expressed genes
US5807522A (en) 1994-06-17 1998-09-15 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Methods for fabricating microarrays of biological samples
US5604097A (en) 1994-10-13 1997-02-18 Spectragen, Inc. Methods for sorting polynucleotides using oligonucleotide tags
US5695934A (en) 1994-10-13 1997-12-09 Lynx Therapeutics, Inc. Massively parallel sequencing of sorted polynucleotides
US5830645A (en) 1994-12-09 1998-11-03 The Regents Of The University Of California Comparative fluorescence hybridization to nucleic acid arrays
WO1996041011A1 (en) 1995-06-07 1996-12-19 Lynx Therapeutics, Inc. Oligonucleotide tags for sorting and identification
US5736330A (en) 1995-10-11 1998-04-07 Luminex Corporation Method and compositions for flow cytometric determination of DNA sequences
US5981180A (en) 1995-10-11 1999-11-09 Luminex Corporation Multiplexed analysis of clinical specimens apparatus and methods
US5736332A (en) 1995-11-30 1998-04-07 Mandecki; Wlodek Method of determining the sequence of nucleic acids employing solid-phase particles carrying transponders
US5658736A (en) 1996-01-16 1997-08-19 Genetics Institute, Inc. Oligonucleotide population preparation
US6458530B1 (en) 1996-04-04 2002-10-01 Affymetrix Inc. Selecting tag nucleic acids
JP4124377B2 (en) 1996-06-06 2008-07-23 ソレクサ・インコーポレイテッド Sequencing by linking code adapters
US6060240A (en) 1996-12-13 2000-05-09 Arcaris, Inc. Methods for measuring relative amounts of nucleic acids in a complex mixture and retrieval of specific sequences therefrom
US6013449A (en) 1997-11-26 2000-01-11 The United States Of America As Represented By The Department Of Health And Human Services Probe-based analysis of heterozygous mutations using two-color labelling

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
NO20003531L (en) 2000-09-05
AU754929B2 (en) 2002-11-28
NO20003531D0 (en) 2000-07-07
EP1054999A2 (en) 2000-11-29
US6265163B1 (en) 2001-07-24
DE69930729D1 (en) 2006-05-18
ATE322556T1 (en) 2006-04-15
PL342114A1 (en) 2001-05-21
WO1999035293A2 (en) 1999-07-15
WO1999035293A3 (en) 1999-09-30
EP1054999B1 (en) 2006-04-05
US6511802B1 (en) 2003-01-28
KR20010033992A (en) 2001-04-25
KR100433782B1 (en) 2004-06-04
AU2113999A (en) 1999-07-26

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CA2317695A1 (en) Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes
US6897023B2 (en) Method for determining relative abundance of nucleic acid sequences
EP2971184B1 (en) Method of generating a three-dimensional nucleic acid containing matrix
JP4227196B2 (en) Generation and use of averaged DNA libraries
US20030049599A1 (en) Methods for negative selections under solid supports
US20020172965A1 (en) Methods for measuring relative amounts of nucleic acids in a complex mixture and retrieval of specific sequences therefrom
KR20140024378A (en) Method and product for localised or spatial detection of nucleic acid in a tissue sample
CA2335447A1 (en) Quantitative microarray hybridization assays
JPH07500735A (en) Messenger RNA identification, isolation and cloning
US6461814B1 (en) Method of identifying gene transcription patterns
WO2008036851A2 (en) Detection of chromosomal inversions
US20080096255A1 (en) Method for Preparing Sequence Tags
US20060228714A1 (en) Nucleic acid representations utilizing type IIB restriction endonuclease cleavage products
US6727068B2 (en) Method for non-redundant library construction
CN100408694C (en) Transcription active test
JP4344086B2 (en) Solid phase selection of differentially expressed genes
WO2002070650A2 (en) Dynamic whole genome screening methodology and systems
AU2005291445B2 (en) Improved electrophoretic separation method for analyzing gene expression
KR20010102909A (en) Methods for manipulating complex nucleic acid populations using peptide-labeled oligonucleotides
CZ20002545A3 (en) Selection of solid phase from differently exprimed genes
WO2003106680A1 (en) Method for amplifying rna, and its use in expression profiling

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
FZDE Discontinued