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A millitome (from Latin ''mille'', meaning "thousand," as in millimeter, and the Greek ''temnein'' meaning "to cut") is a device designed to hold a freshly procured organ and facilitate cutting it into many small tissue blocks for usage in single-cell analysis. A millitome has discrete, equally placed cutting grooves in both the ''x'' and ''y'' directions to guide a
carbon steel Carbon steel is a steel with carbon content from about 0.05 up to 2.1 percent by weight. The definition of carbon steel from the American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) states: * no minimum content is specified or required for chromium, coba ...
cutting knife to produce uniformly sized slices or cubes of tissue material. Millitome design and usage was developed by the HIVE MC-IU Team,
Indiana University Indiana University (IU) is a system of public universities in the U.S. state of Indiana. Campuses Indiana University has two core campuses, five regional campuses, and two regional centers under the administration of IUPUI. * Indiana Univers ...
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Katy Börner Katy Börner (born 1967 in Leipzig, Germany) is an engineer, scholar, author, educator, and speaker specializing in data analysis and data visualization, visualization, particularly in the areas of science and technology (S&T) studies and biomedic ...
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NIH The National Institutes of Health, commonly referred to as NIH (with each letter pronounced individually), is the primary agency of the United States government responsible for biomedical and public health research. It was founded in the late 1 ...
Award No: OT2OD026671) and members of the Cyberinfrastructure for Network Science Center (CNS) for the Human Reference Atlas project, which is part of the U.S. National Institutes of Health Common Fund’s
Human Biomolecular Atlas Program The Human Biomolecular Atlas Program (HuBMAP) is a program funded by the US National Institutes of Health to characterize the human body at single cell resolution, integrated to other efforts such as the Human Cell Atlas. Among the products of the ...
(HuBMAP). Millitomes are used to create uniformly sized tissue blocks that match the shape and size of organs from HuBMAP's 3D Reference Object Library. A millitome has an associated digital data package that includes an
STL file STL is a file format native to the stereolithography CAD software created by 3D Systems. STL has several backronyms such as "Standard Triangle Language" and "Standard Tessellation Language". This file format is supported by many other software ...
, a spreadsheet for assigning spatial locations to HuBMAP IDs, and a metadata file with information about the size, dimensions, donor sex, and laterality of the reference organ for which the millitome is fitted. The procedures outlined here describe how millitomes are generated and how spatial locations for each slice or cube are retained in the Human Reference Atlas.


Models

A millitome modeler creates millitome 3D files that can be 3D printed and is responsible for generating matching 3D virtual blocks for use in the HuBMAP CCF Exploration User Interface or other virtual environments.
OpenScad OpenSCAD is a free software application for creating solid 3D computer-aided design (CAD) objects. It is a script-only based modeller that uses its own description language; parts can be previewed, but cannot be interactively modified by mouse i ...
, an open-source, code-based 3D modeler, is used to create the 3D geometry. All millitome models use 3D reference organs from the NLM Visible Human Project available via the Human Reference Atlas Portal.  The resulting 3D model has two main uses: # provides 3D geometry data which can be 3D printed, creating a physical millitome. In this case, the 3D files are exported in STL format and imported into a
3D printing 3D printing or additive manufacturing is the construction of a three-dimensional object from a CAD model or a digital 3D model. It can be done in a variety of processes in which material is deposited, joined or solidified under computer ...
application such as Ultimaker Cura or Matter Control. # provides 3D data for tissue blocks cut with the same millitome to be used in a web interface like HuBMAP's EUI. Using the same 3D geometry for both purposes guarantees that dimensions, proportions and other attributes of a specific millitome match in both the physical and virtual versions.


Access and usage

A millitome user visits the HRA Millitome website to access precompiled millitomes for different organs and select the best matching organs in terms of donor sex, organ laterality (if applicable), organ size, and cutting distances. The user then downloads a data file package for the customized millitome that comprises three files: # an STL file used to 3D print the millitome tissue cutting tool # a Lookup CSV file that ties predefined millitome IDs to HuBMAP IDs # a Metadata CSV file with information about the millitome to ensure reproducibility The STL file can be 3D printed in house or sent to a commercial printing service. The Lookup CSV file ties millitome IDs (denoting a tissue block on the millitome) to HuBMAP IDs (physical tissue blocks cut with the millitome). The Metadata CSV file provides the following metadata about the millitome: organ, sex, laterality (if applicable), size of tissue block, and size of the cutting grid used by the millitome. It also contains metadata about each millitome ID in the millitome STL: ''x'', ''y'', ''z''-position and ''x'', ''y''-dimension.


Use in cutting tissue

The millitome tray is used with a carbon or stainless steel knife. Once the organ is cut, the location and rotation of all tissue blocks should be maintained. Ice cube trays have been used successfully to keep tissue blocks separated and in order. As one 3D printing of a millitome can take several hours, organ SMEs interested in acquiring many tissue cubes from a whole organ should pre-print millitomes of standard sizes and keep them on hand in their labs. This allows for human tissue to be cut immediately when it becomes available.


Identifying tissue blocks

The Lookup CSV spreadsheet provided as part of the data package lists Millitome IDs that have been pre-assigned to each block in the cutting grid. Militome IDs are assigned using numbers for the ''y-''axis, letters for the ''x-''axis, and letters “b” or “t” for bottom/top laterality. The Millitome User records the Tissue Block ID assigned to each tissue sample based on their location within the millitome. This allows data from the tissue sample to be connected to a particular virtual tissue block location within the reference organ.


Reviewing Millitome Tissue Registrations

Once the millitome data package has been ingested by the Infrastructure Engagement Component of the HuBMAP Consoritum, the millitome user visits the Exploration User Interface to verify that the size, placement, and orientation of all tissue blocks is correct. Information on this process is outlined in the Registration User Interface SOP under the section "Checking Your Registration with the Exploration User Interface."{{Cite journal , last=Bueckle , first=Andreas , date=2022-05-20 , title=SOP: Using the CCF Registration User Interface , url=https://zenodo.org/record/6628366 If corrections or adjustments are needed, the millitome user contacts the facilitator to make the updates.


References


External links


HuBMAP Consortium

HuBMAP Visible Human MOOC (VHMOOC)

Cyberinfrastructure for Network Science (CNS) Center
Histology Surgical instruments