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whitehead home > public programs > ask a scientist > archives > what is a microarray?
 

Aug. 24, 2006 — What is a microarray?

Response by Jennifer Love
Technician, Whitehead Institute Center for Microarray Technology

Formal definition: A tool used to sift through and analyze the information contained within a genome or proteome. A microarray consists of different nucleic acid or protein probes that are chemically attached to a substrate, which can be a microchip, a glass slide or a microsphere-sized bead.

What does that mean? In its simplest form, a microarray is any array (a large number of ordered objects) of biological material, printed on a solid substrate in a “micro” format, which allows many objects to share a relatively small area. An example might be a glass microscope slide (approximately 1x3 inches) with 30,000 objects printed on it.

A closeup of a microarray printer head, showing the detail of a microarray printing pin.

The objects are placed on the substrate by a robot that can deposit very small volumes of material into discrete spots on the array. The material being deposited is in liquid form, and small pins dip down into wells of a microplate, pick up a small volume via capillary action, and then touch down on the substrate, leaving a tiny dot of liquid behind. This process is repeated by several pins operating in parallel, over many plates of material. The material being spotted can fall under several categories, and is typically DNA, RNA or proteins.

A snapshot of a microarray with a fluorescent probe. The image is generated by a microarray scanner.

Scientists can use a microarray to answer thousands of questions at once. In the commonly used “genome array,” for example, the entire genome for an organism can be represented on one slide, with each spot containing multiple copies of a short DNA sequence (oligonucleotide) that uniquely identifies one gene. Then, a sample of RNA, which represents all of the genes being converted into protein at that moment in the cell’s lifecycle, can be fluorescently labeled and applied to the microarray

A gene present in the RNA sample finds its DNA counterpart on the microarray, and binds to it, and then the spot becomes fluorescent. A microarray scanner is then used to “read” the microarray. It zooms in on the array and measures the fluorescence in each spot. The more fluorescent a spot is, the more copies of that gene were present in the RNA sample.

A microplate, containing nucleic acids or protein in solution, to be used with a microarray printer.

Usually, a microarray is used as a means to compare the profiles of two different samples to one another. For instance, with the genome array, one could determine which genes are being turned on or off incorrectly to cause skin cancer by comparing the RNA profile of a cancerous skin cell to that of a healthy skin cell. Then, drugs or other treatments could potentially be developed.

There are many new an exciting uses for microarrays. For a detailed introductory paper examining microarray technology, dowload Introduction to Microarray Technology (2.6 MB PDF).


Last updated August 24, 2006

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