Takashi
Anazawa
*a and
Motohiro
Yamazaki
b
aHitachi, Ltd., Research & Development Group, Japan. E-mail: takashi.anazawa.rc@hitachi.com
bHitachi High-Technologies Corporation, Science & Medical Systems Business Group, Japan
First published on 8th November 2017
Although multi-point, multi-color fluorescence-detection systems are widely used in various sciences, they would find wider applications if they are miniaturized. Accordingly, an ultra-small, four-emission-point and four-color fluorescence-detection system was developed. Its size (space between emission points and a detection plane) is 15 × 10 × 12 mm, which is three-orders-of-magnitude smaller than that of a conventional system. Fluorescence from four emission points with an interval of 1 mm on the same plane was respectively collimated by four lenses and split into four color fluxes by four dichroic mirrors. Then, a total of sixteen parallel color fluxes were directly input into an image sensor and simultaneously detected. The emission-point plane and the detection plane (the image-sensor surface) were parallel and separated by a distance of only 12 mm. The developed system was applied to four-capillary array electrophoresis and successfully achieved Sanger DNA sequencing. Moreover, compared with a conventional system, the developed system had equivalent high fluorescence-detection sensitivity (lower detection limit of 17 pM dROX) and 1.6-orders-of-magnitude higher dynamic range (4.3 orders of magnitude).
Particularly for DNA sequencing, multi-point, multi-color fluorescence detection is indispensable. As for Sanger DNA sequencing,14,15 plural DNA fragments labeled with different fluorophores for four kinds of nucleotide at their terminals are prepared from a sample and electrophoretically separated in each capillary of a capillary array,14 or in each channel of a microchip-channel array,15 and fluorescence from each capillary or channel is simultaneously (or sequentially) and spectroscopically detected. STR genotyping16–18 is carried out by using similar analyzers to those used for Sanger DNA sequencing. As for next-generation DNA sequencing,19 plural DNA fragments are separately colonized on a plate and incorporated step-by-step by any of four kinds of nucleotide labeled with different fluorophores, and at each step, fluorescence from each colony is simultaneously and spectroscopically detected. As for single-molecule real-time DNA sequencing,20 a single molecule of a DNA fragment is immobilized in each waveguide of a zero-mode-waveguide array and continuously incorporated by any of four kinds of nucleotide labeled with different fluorophores, and fluorescence from each molecule in each waveguide is simultaneously and spectroscopically detected in real time. As for nanopore DNA sequencing,21 a single molecule of a DNA fragment entirely labeled with two kinds of fluorophore based on the base sequence of the molecule is translocated through each nanopore of a nanopore array, and fluorescence from each molecule at each nanopore is simultaneously and spectroscopically detected in real time.
Multi-point, multi-color fluorescence detection is becoming more important in flow cytometric analysis. As for flow cytometric analysis of single cells,22,23 single cells labeled with two or three kinds of fluorophore are flowed in each channel of a channel array of a microchip, and to obtain high-content information concerning individual cells, fluorescence from each single cell in each channel is simultaneously and spectroscopically detected.
An optical system for multi-point, multi-color fluorescence detection is usually composed of a single, common collimating lens to collect fluorescence emitted from multiple points and a single, common focusing lens to image it on a sensor. A microscope objective lens or a camera lens is used as the collimating lens. A microscope objective lens, a camera lens, or a simpler lens (e.g., a single lens) is also used as the focusing lens. The sensor is a two-dimensional sensor (e.g., CCD or CMOS), a one-dimensional (linear) sensor (e.g., photo-diode array), or a dimensionless sensor (e.g., PMT). Fluorescence from all of the multiple points or a part (e.g., only a single point) of them is simultaneously and independently detected by the optical system. In the latter case, the part is scanned across all the multiple points by mechanically changing the relative position of the optical system to the multiple points. In addition to the above components, a long-pass filter to cut excitation light and a spectroscopic means for detecting multi-color fluorescence are inserted between the two lenses. The spectroscopic means can be categorized as time-division filters9,12,19 dichroic mirrors,4,5,15,16,20–22 or wavelength dispersion.8,10,17,18,23 With time-division filters, each of the different plural wavelength-band-pass filters is mechanically and sequentially inserted. With dichroic mirrors, a single dichroic mirror or a series of plural dichroic mirrors is used to split the fluorescence flux into plural fluxes with different wavelength bands. When the plural fluxes travel in different directions, plural focusing lenses and plural sensors are used to detect each flux. With wavelength dispersion, a grating, a prism, or an acousto-optic tunable filter (AOTF) is used to obtain a fluorescence spectrum.
Each of the above optical systems is large and occupies a significant part of the analyzer. To realize compact and inexpensive analyzers, therefore, miniaturizing the optical system is important. Such analyzers will rapidly become widespread; that is, not only scientists but also ordinary people will execute various applications using such analyzers to support their healthcare. Multi-point fluorescence-detection systems have been miniaturized in various studies.23–26 In each system, a two-dimensional sensor is placed close to multiple points, and fluorescence emitted from those points is directly incident onto and detected by the sensor through an emission filter without use of any lenses between the multiple points and the sensor.23–25 Alternatively, fluorescence emitted from the multiple points is imaged by a camera of a cell phone through an emission filter.26 In these optical systems, a pinhole array,23 a spatial modulation,24 or a temporal modulation26 is used to increase spatial resolution. However, fluorescence-detection sensitivity is not high (lower fluorophore concentration detection-limit of about 1 μM), and multi-color fluorescence cannot be detected by these optical systems.
As a representative conventional optical system for detecting multi-point and multi-color fluorescence with high fluorescence-detection sensitivity, the optical system of a Sanger DNA sequencing analyzer (e.g., Applied Biosystems™ 3500xL Genetic Analyzer) is explained below.18,27 Fluorescence emitted from 24 points with intervals of 0.37 mm (forming an 8.5 mm-wide one-dimensional array in which 24 capillaries are irradiated by a laser beam) is collimated by a camera lens (f = 50 mm and F = 1.4, i.e., effective diameter of 35.7 mm) to form a fluorescence flux. The flux is passed through a long-pass filter and a transmission grating and then focused by another camera lens (f = 50 mm and F = 1.4) to form spectrum images of fluorescence (500–700 nm) from the 24 points on a two-dimensional CCD. Because the direction of wavelength-dispersion is perpendicular to the direction of the multi-point array, each fluorescence spectrum image is independently and simultaneously detected. For each point, fluorescence-detection sensitivity is high (i.e., lower fluorophore concentration detection-limit of ∼20 pM), and the dynamic range is also high (2.7-orders-of-magnitude fluorophore-concentration range). The “size” of the optical system (defined as the size occupied by the optical system between the multiple points and the sensor surface of the CCD) is 2 × 106 mm3 (100 × 100 × 200 mm). Note that the size does not include parts surrounding the optical system, such as holders of components, and interspaces between the optical system and other systems.
In the present study, an ultra-small optical system for multi-point, multi-color fluorescence detection was developed. Specifically, the optical system of a four-capillary-array DNA sequencer with four-color fluorescence detection was miniaturized by three orders of magnitude. As for detecting fluorescence on four points with this optical system, sensitivity is as high as and crosstalk between adjacent points is as low as those of a conventional optical system. Moreover, the dynamic range is more than one order of magnitude higher than that of a conventional system. These advantageous features of the developed optical system make it possible to provide not only a compact and inexpensive capillary-array DNA sequencer but also other analyzers equipped with a multi-point, multi-color detection system.
A challenge regarding the above-described system is to achieve photo-detection with both high sensitivity and low crosstalk for all emission points, because those two features have a trade-off relation as explained below. In particular, dsj changes with optical length between Li and S (sensor distance, h); that is, ds1 at h = h1 for Si1, ds2 at h = h2 for Si2, ds3 at h = h3 for Si3, and ds4 at h = h4 for Si4 differ because each emission point has a finite diameter (dp > 0), so all color fluxes (Cij) are not completely parallel. For low crosstalk, to avoid overlap between any two images (Sij), it is important to minimize maximum dsj. Under practical conditions, ds1 < ds2 < ds3 < ds4 because 0 < h1 < h2 < h3 < h4; therefore, maximum dsj is minimized when ds4 is minimized; that is, each emission point is focused at h = h4 or Ci4 is just focused on S by setting the distance between Ei and Li (emission-point distance, g) as
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
On the other hand, as for the conditions for high sensitivity, light-collection efficiency of Li must be increased. Therefore, the effective F-number (Fe) of Li (Fe = g/D = (1 + f/(h4 − f)) * f/D) must be less than a specific target F-number (F0): Fe < F0; that is,
(4) |
As described above, eqn (3) and (4) obviously express a trade-off relation; namely, larger f and smaller h4 are preferable for low crosstalk, whereas smaller f and larger h4 are preferable for high sensitivity. Eqn (3) and (4) are expressed in Fig. 1c, where dp = 0.05 mm, p = 1 mm, D = 1.13 mm, F0 = 2.0, 1.4, or 1.0, the horizontal axis is h4, and the vertical axis is f. Here, the shape of each Li is assumed as a 1 × 1 mm square, which gives D = 1.13 mm. The region below each dashed line indicates the high-sensitivity conditions given by eqn (4), and the region above the solid line indicates the low-crosstalk conditions given by eqn (3). Therefore, the region between the dashed line and the solid line indicates both conditions; namely, the gray region indicates both high sensitivity with Fe < 2.0 and low crosstalk. As shown by the gray region, high sensitivity and low crosstalk are concurrently achievable only when the developed system is miniaturized such that 0 < f < 2.2 mm and 0 < h4 < 45 mm.
Results of a ray-trace simulation of 600 nm-wavelength rays emitted from Ei and collected by Li are shown in Fig. 2a, where the one-half light-emission angle from Ei was 21°, which is equal to the one-half light-collection angle of Li. To improve visualization, rays from P1 and P3 are indicated by black lines, and rays from P2 and P4 are indicated by blue lines, respectively. Four circular images of Si1, Si2, Si3, and Si4 (for each i, a total of sixteen circular images) on S are indicated in green, yellow, orange, and red, respectively. As shown in Fig. 2b, the intervals between S1j and S2j, S2j and S3j, and S3j and S4j are respectively p = 1 mm, those between Si2 and Si3, and Si3 and Si4, are respectively q = 2.5 mm, and the interval between Si1 and Si2 is 2.1 mm. The aspheric surface shape and refractive index of each lens used in the simulation were complied with actual specifications published by the manufacturer of the lens. Therefore, unlike ideal optical calculations based on eqn (1) to (4) and Fig. 1c, the present simulation considered aberrations of each lens. As a result, ds1 = 0.57 mm, ds2 = 0.53 mm, ds3 = 0.51 mm, and ds4 = 0.64 mm (where each dsj is the full-width at 10% maximum) were obtained (see “intensity profile and size of emission-point image” in the ESI†). The simulated value of ds4 (0.64 mm) is slightly larger than the ideal value of ds4 (0.54 mm) by eqn (2). On the other hand, when the one-half light-emission angle from Ei was reduced to 10°, ds1 = 0.42 mm, ds2 = 0.46 mm, ds3 = 0.50 mm, and ds4 = 0.55 mm were obtained (see the same section in the ESI†). In this case, the simulated value of ds4 (0.55 mm) agrees well with the ideal value of ds4 (0.54 mm) given by eqn (2). These results indicate dsj slightly increases with an increase of the one-half light-emission angle from Ei because of aberrations caused by the marginal part of Li. However, even when the one-half light-emission angle from Ei is 21°, because all dsj values are less than the interval between any two images (Sij), any two images do not overlap, as shown in Fig. 2a; that is, low crosstalk photo-detection is achieved.
As shown in Fig. 3a, the four-emission-point array (Ei) was formed by illuminating halogen-lamp light onto a stainless-steel-plate (with a size of 15 × 15 mm and thickness of 0.1 mm) with a four-pinhole array from underneath. The diameters and intervals of the four pinholes were φ0.05 ± 0.002 mm and 1 mm, respectively. On the other hand, as shown in Fig. 3c, the four-lens array Li was fabricated by cutting four φ2.4 mm lenses (one of which is shown in Fig. 3b) into four 1 × 1 mm square lenses (as indicated by a dashed square in Fig. 3b) and adhering them side-by-side at intervals of 1 mm (see the Experimental section for details). Subsequently, as shown in Fig. 4a–d, which are a series of photographs of the same field of perspective view taken by a fixed camera, four-emission-point, four-color photo-detection by the system shown in Fig. 2 was demonstrated. First, the four-emission-point array (shown in Fig. 3a) was placed horizontally (Fig. 4a). The one-half light-emission angle upward from each pinhole was approximately 10°. Second, the four-lens array (shown in Fig. 3c) was positioned above the four-emission-point array (Fig. 4b). Third, the four-dichroic-mirror array (Mj) with the long-pass filter was positioned above the four-lens array (Fig. 4c). Fourth, a piece of powder paper with a size of 10 × 10 mm was placed on the four-dichroic-mirror array (Fig. 4d). Consequently, the sixteen circular images (Sij) could be observed on the paper by the human eye. According to the transmission spectra shown in Fig. 4e, and the simulation results shown in Fig. 2a, the four circular images of Si1, Si2, Si3, and Si4 (for each i, a total of sixteen circular images) appeared green, yellow, orange, and red, respectively. Transmission spectra for Ci1, Ci2, Ci3, and Ci4, normalized to Fi are shown by green, yellow, orange, and red lines, respectively, in Fig. 4e. Wavelength bands of Ci1, Ci2, Ci3, and Ci4 with transmittance of more than 50% are 520–555 nm, 555–585 nm, 585–620 nm, and 620–675 nm, respectively. Not only is the spectral resolution between any two-color fluxes (Cij) high but also the maximum transmittance for each Cij is more than 90%. Finally, after the paper was removed, the CMOS image sensor was positioned on the four-dichroic-mirror array. Then, as shown in Fig. 4f, an image with a size of 10 × 5 mm (1538 × 769 pixels) containing the sixteen circular images (Sij) was obtained. There is no overlap (no crosstalk) between any two images (Sij). By adjusting the emission-point distance as g = 1.57 mm, Si4 is just in focus whereas Si1, Si2, and Si3 are slightly out of focus (see “intensity profile and size of emission-point image” in the ESI†). The light intensity of Si3 is smaller than that of Si1, Si2, and Si4 because of a smaller spectral overlap of the halogen-lamp-light spectrum and transmission spectrum for Ci3, especially in the range of >700 nm (not shown in Fig. 4e). Intervals between images (Sij) agree with those in Fig. 2a, although they vary slightly due to imperfect assemblies of the four-lens array and the four-dichroic-mirror array. The diameters of Sij are ds1 = 0.40 ± 0.01 mm, ds2 = 0.45 ± 0.01 mm, ds3 = 0.48 ± 0.01 mm, and ds4 = 0.54 ± 0.01 mm (average ± standard deviation for i, where each dsj is the full-width at 10% maximum) were obtained (see the same section in the ESI†). These experimental values of dsj agree well with the simulated values of dsj (ds1 = 0.42 mm, ds2 = 0.46 mm, ds3 = 0.50 mm, and ds4 = 0.55 mm) when the one-half light-emission angle is 10° and smaller than the interval between any two images.
Fig. 3 Components of the ultra-small system demonstrated in Fig. 4. Scale bars are 3 mm. (a) Four-emission-point array (Ei) with diameters and intervals of φ0.05 and 1 mm, respectively, formed by illuminating a halogen-lamp light onto a four-pinhole-array plate from underneath. (b) Glass-molded plano-convex aspheric lens with an outer diameter of φ2.4 mm and a clear aperture with diameter of φ1.6 mm. (c) Four-lens array (Li) fabricated by cutting four of the lens in (b) along the dashed square into four 1 × 1 mm square lens and adhering them at intervals of 1 mm in the holder. |
Fig. 4 Demonstration of four-color, four-emission-point detection by the ultra-small system. (a)−(d) A series of photographs of the same field of perspective view taken by a fixed camera: (a) four-emission-point array Ei (shown in Fig. 3(a)); (b) four-lens array Li (shown in Fig. 3(c)) positioned above Ei; (c) four-dichroic-mirror array Mj positioned above Li; (d) a piece of 10 × 10 mm powder paper placed on Mj for displaying sixteen visible circular images (Sij); (e) total transmission spectra for Ci1, Ci2, Ci3, and Ci4; and (f) sixteen circular images (Sij) taken by a CMOS image sensor placed on Mj. |
The four-capillary array with the laser beam shown in Fig. 5b was connected to the developed ultra-small optical system shown in Fig. 2a so that Di was positioned at Ei for each i and that the axes of the capillaries were perpendicular to the array directions of the four-emission points and four lenses but parallel to the sensor surface (see “four-capillary array detection system” and Fig. S3 in the ESI†). The detection points functioned as emission points; that is, dp = 0.05 mm, p = 1 mm, and the distance between each lens and the plane was g = 1.57 mm. Fluorescence and background light from the emission points were detected by the optical system. Instead of sixteen circular images, Sij in Fig. 2a, sixteen rectangular images were obtained on the sensor surface by light ray-trace simulations, as shown in Fig. S3.† This is because the shape of each emission point is not circular with a diameter of dp = 0.05 mm but rectangular with a width of dp = 0.05 mm (inner diameter of the capillary) and a height of 0.01 mm (laser-beam diameter). Because both the width and height of each rectangular emission point are smaller than those of each circular emission point, any two of the rectangular images do not overlap; that is, low-crosstalk fluorescence detection is achieved.
CMOS images for 8 M urea solutions containing 100 nM dR110 (λmax = 541 nm), 100 nM dR6G (λmax = 568 nm), 100 nM dTAMRA (λmax = 595 nm), and 100 nM dROX (λmax = 618 nm) injected into the four capillaries are shown in Fig. 6a–d, respectively. In each CMOS image, as shown by the simulation results in Fig. S3,† the sixteen rectangular images (Sij) were observed without mutual overlap. The fluorescence intensity of Sij changes with the color number j but stays almost constant with the emission-point number i (between the four capillaries). The patterns of change in the fluorescence intensity of Si1, Si2, Si3, and Si4 obviously differ for the four CMOS images, that is, the four kinds of fluorophore. For each fluorophore, relative fluorescence intensities accumulated in Si1, Si2, Si3, and Si4 with reference to the maximum fluorescence intensity are respectively shown in Fig. 7a. Each column and error bar respectively indicate the average and standard deviation of relative fluorescence intensity on the four capillaries. These results agree well with relative fluorescence intensities calculated from the product of the transmission spectra for Ci1, Ci2, Ci3, and Ci4 shown in Fig. 4e and the fluorescence spectra of the four kinds of fluorophore. Because the patterns of change in the fluorescence intensity of Si1, Si2, Si3, and Si4 for the four kinds of fluorophore differ significantly, it is possible to quantify the concentration of each fluorophore on each capillary (even when more than two kinds of fluorophore coexist on the detection point) by deconvolution of spectral overlaps between the four kinds of fluorophore shown in Fig. 7a.
Fig. 7 Four-color fluorescence detection of the four-capillary array by the developed ultra-small optical system. (a) Relative fluorescence intensity of Sij against color number j in Fig. 6. (b) Relative fluorescence intensity of S24 (emission-point number i = 2 (E2) and color number j =4 (C4)) against the dROX concentration when dROX with various concentrations was injected into capillary P2. (c) Sanger DNA sequencing results for 203 to 288 bases obtained by P2. |
The relative fluorescence intensity of S24 (i = 2 and j = 4) with reference to the fluorescence intensity of S24 at 10−11 M dROX is plotted against dROX concentration in Fig. 7b, where an 8 M urea solution containing dROX at various concentration was injected into capillary P2 and an 8 M urea solution without dROX was injected into the other capillaries (P1, P3, and P4). Relative fluorescence intensity of S24 was derived by subtracting a constant value corresponding to the pixel background intensity accumulated within S24 from the pixel signal intensity accumulated within S24. As a result, a linear relation with a slope of one ranging from 10−11 M to at least 5 × 10−7 M dROX, that is, covering a dROX concentration range of more than 4.7 orders of magnitude, was obtained. At the same time, the relative fluorescence intensities of S14, S34, and S44 are less than 0.1% of the relative fluorescence intensity of S24 at any dROX concentration. Therefore, very low crosstalk was also obtained. On the other hand, the lower concentration detection-limit was 1.7 × 10−11 M (17 pM) dROX with a S/N of 2, where S and N are the relative fluorescence intensity and the standard deviation of the relative background intensity, respectively. Sensitivity of the developed system is as high as that of a conventional system, and the dynamic range covers dROX concentration of more than 4.3 orders of magnitude (ranging from 1.7 × 10−11 M to at least 5 × 10−7 M dROX), namely, more than 1.6 orders of magnitude higher than that of the conventional system. Such a wide dynamic range was obtained because the area of each rectangular image (Sij) is approximately two orders of magnitude larger than the area of each emission point (Ei) (i.e., magnification ratio of 11.5); therefore, the detectable photon number without detector saturation for each Sij is approximately two orders of magnitude higher than that for a conventional system using a zero-magnification optical system.
A representative electropherogram for DNA sequencing by capillary-array electrophoresis is shown in Fig. 7c. Similar results were obtained by the other three capillaries. In each capillary, DNA fragments labeled with four kinds of fluorophore were electrophoretically separated, and laser-induced fluorescence was detected and deconvoluted to give each fluorophore concentration at arbitrary time points. Read length and migration time were comparable to those obtained by a conventional system under the same electrophoretic conditions (approximately 750 bases and 60 min).
As for the first advanced system, although the four-lens array was fabricated by bonding 1 mm-square glass lenses, it is possible to fabricate a plastic-lens array with similar specifications by injection molding, which is suitable for not only mass production of the lens array at low cost but also accurate alignment of each lens. Additionally, it is also feasible to array more lenses, to array lenses more densely, and/or to array two-dimensional lenses as explained below.
As for the second, the number of the emission points from which multi-color fluorescence is independently and simultaneously detected is easily increased as long as the width of the sensor surface of a CCD or CMOS is larger than that of the emission-point array. Fluorescence from up-to-13 emission points with the same interval (p = 1 mm) is detectable only by increasing the number of identical lens in the developed system (where the sensor width of the CMOS is 13.312 mm). When the sensor is replaced with a wider one, for example, a front-illuminated CCD area image sensor S9979 (Hamamatsu Photonics K.K.) with width of 73.728 mm, fluorescence from up to 73 points is detectable. Of course, it is possible to easily array multiple image sensors to have a much larger width and to detect fluorescence from significantly more emission points.
As for the third, fluorescence from more densely arrayed emission points (p < 1 mm), that is, more emission points, is also detectable. For example, fluorescence from emission points arrayed four-times-more densely (i.e., four-times more emission points) with diameter of dp = 0.01 mm and interval of p = 0.25 mm is detectable by 0.25 mm-square lenses (with f = 0.4 mm and p = 0.25 mm) and a smaller four-dichroic-mirror array (with h4 = 10.0 mm). In this case, because ds4 = 0.24 mm < p = 0.25 mm, the conditions for low crosstalk, i.e., eqn (3), are satisfied. On the other hand, because g = 0.42 mm, D = 0.28 mm, and Fe = g/D = 1.47, the conditions for high sensitivity, i.e., eqn (3), are satisfied when F0 = 1.5.
As for the fourth, it is possible to detect fluorescence from two-dimensionally arrayed emission points by sequentially scanning a field including a one-dimensional array of part of the emission points from which fluorescence is detected at a time in the perpendicular direction to the one-dimensional array. It is also effective to scan the field in the parallel direction to the one-dimensional array to detect fluorescence from a one-dimensional dense array of emission points with a smaller interval than the lens-array interval of the developed system.
As for the fifth, an array of more than four dichroic mirrors can detect more-than-four-color fluorescence. For example, eight-color fluorescence can be detected by an eight-dichroic-mirror array. Because the spectroscopic resolution is high, such fluorescence detection is practically equivalent to fluorescence-spectrum detection, which enables independent and simultaneous quantification of concentrations of coexistent and up-to-eight kinds of fluorophore.
As for the sixth, when multiple emission points are not in the capillary array or the microchip channel array, but on plates, it is necessary to combine the developed system with a fluorescence–excitation technique other than side-entry laser-beam irradiation.14,18,27 As explained below, one promising technique is to use an array of epi-illumination systems. The long-pass filter in the system shown in Fig. 2 is replaced by another dichroic mirror to separate excitation light and fluorescence. A laser-beam array is reflected onto the lens array of the developed system by the dichroic mirror in parallel, focused by the lens array, and irradiated onto the emission-point array. Fluorescence from the emission-point array is collected by the same lens array, passes through the same dichroic mirror, and is detected.
As for the seventh, it is feasible to simply replace the dichroic-mirror array and the monochrome image sensor in the developed system with a color image sensor such as a Bayer-pattern RGB-color-filtered image sensor. Even in that case, it is necessary to satisfy eqn (3) and (4), where h4 is replaced with h, that is, the sensor distance when the dichroic-mirror array is removed. In eqn (2), ds4 is replaced with ds. Thanks to recent popularization of digital color cameras, the cost of such a color sensor has been remarkably reduced. Therefore, adopting such a color sensor results in a more-inexpensive optical system or analyzer, although sensitivity and spectroscopic resolution of fluorescence detection are decreased. Moreover, it enables simultaneous detection of fluorescence from more densely and two-dimensionally arrayed emission points by two-dimensionally arrayed lenses. For example, fluorescence from two-dimensionally arrayed emission points with dp = 0.01 mm and p = 0.10 mm is independently and simultaneously detectable by two-dimensionally arrayed 0.1 mm square lenses with f = 0.15 mm, p = 0.10 mm, and h = 1.5 mm. In that case, because ds = 0.09 mm < p = 0.10 mm, the conditions for low crosstalk; i.e., eqn (3) are satisfied. On the other hand, because g = 0.17 mm, D = 0.11 mm, and Fe = g/D = 1.47, the conditions for high sensitivity, i.e., eqn (3) are satisfied when F0 = 1.5.
As for the last system, it should be noted that the developed systems are applicable to not only fluorescence detection but also absorbance detection. That is, it is possible to construct an ultra-small system for multi-emission-point, multi-color absorbance detection. In particular, rays emitted from emission points are replaced by transmitted rays through sample-solution-containing cells or channels where emission points are respectively positioned. This system opens up the way to creating more-advanced systems and various applications.
(5) |
Four pieces of the square lens were adhered side-by-side to form the four-lens array (Fig. 3c) with a size of 1 × 4 mm and a height of 1 mm so that the four optical axes were parallel at intervals of 1 mm and the planar surfaces were in the same plane. The actual size of the four-lens array (including the adhesive) was 1.048 × 4.012 mm. The interval between the lenses was 1.006 ± 0.003 mm. The standard deviation of the positions of the four optical axes in the perpendicular direction to the four-lens array was also 0.003 mm. The difference in the levels of the planar surfaces was within 0.002 mm. As shown in Fig. 3c and 4b, the four-lens array was mounted in a planar holder with a thickness of 2 mm so that the same plane coincided with the bottom surface of the holder. The four-lens array was positioned by manipulating the holder.
On the other hand, as for fluorescence detection by the developed system, whereas sensitivity is as high as that of a conventional system, the dynamic range is more than one order of magnitude higher. It is therefore possible to concurrently detect trace amounts to larger amounts of DNA fragments; that is, the developed system is more robust over a wide range of sample concentrations. This feature reduces the burden on users in terms of sample preparation or sample control. It is also possible to detect rare DNA mutation, e.g., present at <0.1%, in a background wild-type DNA.
Other than Sanger DNA sequencing and STR genotyping, these advanced systems can be used in applications such as next-generation, single-molecule real-time, and nanopore DNA sequencing. As for next-generation DNA sequencing, patterned colonies on the plate, recently distributed by Illumina as a “patterned flow cell”, are preferable to random colonies, because the lens array can be matched to the patterned colonies. The applications also include qPCR, ddPCR, melting-curve analysis, nucleic-acid-hybridization- or antigen–antibody-reaction-based analysis on a microarray plate or a microtiter plate, and flow cytometric analysis of single cells.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c7lc01070b |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |