The present invention relates to a Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) instrument.
SPR sensing has become a widely used technique for the measurement of biomolecular interactions, quantification of proteins, and measurement of DNA. Briefly, SPR relies on an optical excitation of a charge-density oscillation existing at the interface between a thin metallic film and a dielectric material. Resonance conditions are achieved when the light is in total internal reflection at a wavelength-angle couple matching a wavevector of the Surface Plasmon (SP). Multiple optical configurations can possibly excite SPs.
A popular configuration uses monochromatic light to interrogate an angle of resonance with the SP, commonly known as the Kretschmann configuration. Many commercially successful SPR instruments are based on this Kretschmann optical configuration. However, this technology suffers from drawbacks limiting its use in biomedical applications; such SPR instruments are usually expensive to implement, they cannot be deployed on the field due to size constraint of the optical path, and they are not compatible with biological samples. Thus, in spite of the popularity of the Kretschmann SPR instruments, there still exists a need to develop a SPR instrument combining the high resolution of the angle interrogation configuration with the advantages of an inexpensive and portable instrument.
SPR instruments based on different configurations have been investigated as alternatives to the angle interrogation SPR configuration. Among them, a SPR instrument using a fiber optic as the sensing element is a cost effective alternative to research grade instruments; they are portable and can be adapted to various applications such as salinity sensor, biosensor for wound healing, biosensor for cardiac markers, and biosensor for staphylococcal enterotoxin B. Sensitivity of fiber optic SPR can be improved using near infrared excitation of a micro prism located at the tip of the fiber optic. However, the resolution achieved with fiber optic SPR is limited by the numerical aperture (NA) of the optical fiber required to implement fiber optic SPR. A large numerical aperture (NA=0.39) fiber is used to propagate the SPR-active wavelength-angle couples. However, due to a large number of wavelength-angle couples propagating in the fiber optic and entering in resonance with the SPR surface, the SPR spectrum broadens resulting in a limited resolution characterising this configuration. To minimize this effect, a low numerical aperture (NA=0.12) fiber can be modified with a micro-prism at the distal end thereof to improve the SPR spectrum and increase the accessible range of refractive indices. Using the fiber optic SPR configuration, the resolution is limited to approximately 1.4×10−6 RIU (Refractive Index Unit). Further reduction of the numerical aperture of the optical fiber can achieve a resolution similar to the angle interrogation SPR configuration (approximately 5×10−7 RIU). However, current manufacturing techniques do not enable such low numerical aperture.
An alternative to angle interrogation SPR or fiber optic SPR uses a multi-wavelength excitation. This configuration combines elements of the angle interrogation SPR and fiber optic SPR instruments. In a multi-wavelength excitation scheme, collimated white light from an excitation optical fiber is reflected at a single angle and the reflected light is analyzed with a spectrophotometer using a collection optical fiber. Among other factors, the resolution of multi-wavelength SPR is limited by the spectral resolution of the spectrophotometer, which is a function of the grating density. The recent development of a miniature spectrophotometer with high spectral resolution may potentially enable the measurement of the refractive index with high resolution using SPR with a small footprint. In the case of the angle interrogation SPR configuration, the resolution depends on scanning of the incident angle (slow measurement and complex mechanical setup) or on focusing of the incident light beam at the interface between a prism and a thin metallic film (made for example of Au) onto a linear array of photodiodes (precise alignment and lengthy optical path are required for high resolution). Hence, the angle interrogation SPR configuration is not suitable for portability and for an inexpensive design of SPR instrument. A current drawback limiting the use of a multi-wavelength SPR instrument is the precise alignment of the optics at the angle of excitation or the manufacture of a small sensing element.
Increasingly, the need for multiplex arrays is arising for simultaneous multi-analyte detection. Spatially resolved SPR measurements provide a technology for monitoring local changes of refractive index on a surface. Thus, the detection of biomolecular interactions for multiple systems/replicates is possible on a spatially resolved sensing array. SPR imaging, also called SPR microscopy, has been applied for high-throughput analyses of biomolecular binding event. SPR imaging methodology has also been recently optimized by improving resolution, optical coupling, and protein array formation. However, no SPR measurement presents the dual capability of measuring the conventional SPR response and the SPR image of a surface.
In the appended drawings:
a is a perspective view an auto-referenced or dual channel SPR instrument in which the light beam from the dove prism is split into a s-polarized reference light beam and a p-polarized detection light beam; and
a is a graph showing a SPR spectrum for sucrose solutions with refractive index varying between 1.33 and 1.36 RIU in a short range configuration; and
a is a graph showing repeated measurement of Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS, 1.33498 RIU) and water (1.33287 RIU);
a is a graph showing measurement of β-lactamase in PBS at nM levels using dove prism SPR and minimum hunting algorithm (relative error=21%);
a is a SPR image of water droplets on an Au film obtained from raw data; and
a is a perspective view of an example of a fluidic cell,
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a surface plasmon resonance instrument, comprising: a first lens for collimating light into a light beam; a prism for propagating the collimated light beam at a single propagation angle and with internal reflection on a face of the prism, wherein the face of the prism is configured to receive a surface plasmon resonance sensor; and an analyzer of the collimated light beam from the prism; wherein at least the first lens and the prism are aligned on a single optical axis.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a surface plasmon resonance measuring method, comprising: applying a surface plasmon resonance sensor on a face of a prism; collimating light into a light beam through a first lens; propagating the collimated light beam through the prism at a single propagation angle and with internal reflection on the face of the prism; and analyzing the collimated light beam from the prism; wherein the method further comprises aligning at least the first lens and the prism on a single optical axis.
The foregoing and other objects, advantages and features of the present invention will become more apparent upon reading of the following non restrictive description of illustrative embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings.
When integrated to a SPR instrument, multi-wavelength excitation provides a SPR instrument that is portable, inexpensive and exhibiting high resolution. However, as indicated in the foregoing description, a current drawback limiting the use of multi-wavelength SPR instruments is the precise alignment of the optics at the angle of SPR excitation and/or the manufacture of a small sensing element.
The use of a dove prism, or other suitable prism, is advantageous to circumvent these drawbacks. The dove prism inverts the image of a collimated light beam impinging parallel to a long face of the dove prism. The angle of propagation in a BK7 dove prism is 72.8° with respect to the vertical. This angle of propagation of 72.8° results in total internal reflection at the long face of the BK7 dove prism and is active in SPR with an excitation wavelength between 600 nm and 1000 nm depending on the refractive index of the solution being sensed. Hence, a single axis optical path is required to construct the SPR instrument, greatly simplifying the optical setup without loss of spatial or optical resolution. The sensing element can be simply composed of a glass slide coated with Au, onto which fluidics can be mounted for efficient sample delivery. This configuration combines the advantages of portable, inexpensive SPR instrument with the high resolution advantage of biosensing with an angle interrogation configuration SPR instrument.
As also discussed in the foregoing description, no SPR measurement possesses the dual capability of measuring the conventional SPR response and the SPR image of a surface. The use of a SPR configuration with a dove prism can perform both conventional SPR response measurement and SPR imaging with a unique instrumental template.
In the following description, there is described a non-restrictive illustrative embodiment of a SPR instrument based on an optical setup using a BK7 dove prism coupled with fiber optics and a spectrophotometer, for example a miniature spectrophotometer to reduce the size of the SPR instrument. The dynamic range, sensitivity, refractive index resolution, reproducibility and biosensing for β-lactamase are also described. Among the multiple data analysis strategies developed to improve resolution of the SPR signal, the minimum hunting (polynomial fit) and the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b) are used to maximize resolution of the SPR response. Spectral denoising is also performed using singular value decomposition of the spectra to improve the signal-to-noise ratio and increase the resolution of the measured SPR response.
Two configurations of the SPR instrument are possible:
1) A first configuration using a collection fiber optic with a spectrophotometer for multi-wavelength SPR; and
2) A second configuration using a band pass filter and an imaging camera to perform SPR imaging. An image of water droplets on an Au surface of the SPR sensor demonstrates the SPR imaging configuration.
SPR Instrument Using a Dove Prism
The multi-wavelength SPR configuration will be first described.
The SPR instrument comprises, as illustrated in
The light exiting the collection fiber optic 109 is supplied to an analyser, for example a spectrophotometer 113 that can be formed by a miniature spectrophotometer. Depending on the Refractive Index (RI) range to be covered, a short spectral range spectrophotometer (550 nm-850 nm) can be used to cover a RI range from 1.32 to 1.39 RIU or a longer spectral range spectrophotometer (550 nm-1100 nm) can be used to cover a RI range from 1.32 to 1.42 RIU.
In the SPR imaging configuration, the collection fiber optic 109 is removed and replaced with an optical band pass filter (610±10 nm) (not shown). The collimated light processed by the optical band pass filter is then analyzed by the analyser. In this case, the analyser may comprise a camera, for example a CCD camera (Andor technology) (not shown). A 50:50 beam splitter can be mounted between the BK7 dove prism 101 and the band pass filter (not shown) for supplying, for example, the collimated light from the lens 110 at the same time to (a) the collection fiber optic 109 and spectrophotometer 113 (SPR wavelength interrogation) and (b) the band pass filter and camera (SPR imaging) on a single platform.
As illustrated in
Also, when the SPR instrument 100 as illustrated in
Still referring to
The active SPR area on the sensor 112 is <1 cm2. This active SPR area can be made tunable by providing an iris (not shown) between the excitation fiber optic 104 and the BK7 dove prism 101.
The collimated light beam 116 exits the BK7 dove prism 101 through a face 117 of said prism 101 angular with respect to the single optical axis, and is collected by the collection fiber optic 109 through the inverted SMA collimating lens 110 for analysis by the spectrophotometer 113. As indicated in the foregoing description, the wavelength can range from 550 nm to 850 nm for a short range of accessible refractive index (1.32 to 1.39 RIU) or the wavelength can range from 550 nm to 1100 nm for a broader range of refractive index accessible to the SPR sensor 112 (1.32 to 1.42 RIU). The multi-wavelength SPR instrument 100 has the capacity of simultaneously acquiring a complete wavelength scan of the SPR spectrum, hence allowing for fast acquisition of the SPR spectra. The data can be acquired at a rate of 50 Hz allowing accumulation of 50 spectra composing one data point (1 second time resolution). In comparison, a SPR instrument that scans angles (by physically moving the light source and/or the optics) cannot achieve such time resolution. Otherwise, focusing a light beam on a SPR prism requires a lengthy optical path to achieve optimal spectral resolution. In contrast, using the BK7 dove prism 101 of
A tunable spectral range is beneficial for different applications. Some applications require high spectral resolution for monitoring the SPR response of low concentration of an analyte with high resolution (for example for biosensing a low protein concentration), while other applications require a large spectral range to monitor changes in refractive index from bulk composition of a solution. With a multi-wavelength SPR configuration, the spectral range of the SPR instrument depends on the grating utilized in the spectrophotometer. For example, a grating with a higher groove density will result in a larger spectral resolution, but a smaller refractive index range accessible to the instrument.
A first implementation uses as spectrophotometer 113, the above mentioned spectrophotometer with the spectral range between 550 nm and 850 nm. This spectrophotometer results in a refractive index range of the SPR instrument 100 between 1.33 and 1.39 RIU (
In a second implementation, the SPR spectra are shown using as spectrophotometer 113, the above mentioned spectrophotometer sensitive between 550 nm and 1100 nm (
Thus, the range of refractive indices accessible to the SPR instrument 100 is tuneable with different spectrophotometers. This multi-wavelength SPR configuration of the SPR instrument 100 results in a single template applicable to different situations.
SPR Sensor
For example, to fabricate the SPR sensor 112, a glass slide 120 of 3″×1″ is cleaned using piranha solution (70% H2SO4:30% H2O2) at 80° C. for 90 minutes. The glass slide is then thoroughly rinsed with 18 MΩ water. Thereafter, the glass slide is further cleaned in an ultrasound bath with a 5:1:1 solution of H2O:H2O2:NH4OH for 60 minutes. Then, the glass slide is thoroughly rinsed with 18 MΩ water and stored in 18 MΩ water until use. The glass slide 120 is air dried undisturbed prior to metallization. Then, to manufacture the SPR sensor 112, a 5 nm-thick adhesion layer of Cr is first deposited on one surface of the slide followed by deposition of the 48 nm Au film 121 on the Cr adhesion layer.
Referring to
Fluidic Cell
As shown in
For example, the total volume that the square recess can contain is smaller than 100 μL. Also, the flow rate of the liquid sample through the square recess will be typically of the order of 16 μL s−1.
Referring to
Detailed Example of the Fluidic Cell
In
Miniaturized SPR Instrument
Referring now to
Auto-Referenced or Dual Channel SPR Instrument
As described herein above with reference to
The configuration and concept of
Calibration of the SPR Sensor
The SPR sensor 112 is calibrated to determine its sensitivity to refractive index within the biological realm of refractive indices. The measurement of the SPR response from solutions of varying refractive indices calibrates the SPR sensor 112 for bulk refractive index changes.
For example, for that purpose, sucrose solutions with concentrations ranging from 0% w/w to 50% w/w are prepared in water to cover the range of refractive indices between 1.33 and 1.42 RIU. Thereafter, the solutions are successively exposed to the SPR sensor 112 using the syringe pump and the fluidic cell 201. Data analysis can be performed by the spectrophotometer 113 using two methodologies: minimum hunting [Gentleman, D. J., Obando, L. A., Masson, J. F., Holloway, J. R., Booksh, K. S., Anal. Chim. Acta, 515 (2004) 291] and a (a−b)/(a+b) algorithm around the minimum reflectance of the SPR spectrum [Tao, N. J., Boussaad, S., Huang, W. L., Arechabaleta, R. A., D'Agnese, J., Rev. Sci. Instrum., 70 (1999) 4656]. Singular Value Decomposition (SVD) of the SPR spectra and reconstruction of the SPR spectra using the first three components is performed to optimize the signal-to-noise ratio. With both data analysis methodologies, an Ordinary Linear Least Squares (OLLS) regression model is used to calibrate the SPR sensor 112.
a and 3b show the SPR spectra for the above first and second implementations, respectively, with sucrose solutions of increasing concentration, thus of increasing refractive index. A refractometer with an accuracy of 1×10−5 RIU is used to accurately measure the refractive index of the sucrose solutions. Sucrose solutions are an appropriate model for refractive index calibration, as sucrose does not interact with the Au film of the SPR sensor 112. Hence, the response measured with the SPR sensor 112 results uniquely from the refractive index of bulk solution and no contribution is observed from the accumulation of molecules at the surface. Thereby, the sensitivity of the SPR instrument 100 using the BK7 dove prism 101 is measured at 1765±100 nm/RIU. A calibration curve for SPR sensors is non linear for large refractive index changes, as the refractive index sensitivity increases for solutions of higher refractive index. Therefore, the above measured sensitivity is only valid for the biologically relevant range of refractive indices between 1.33 and 1.35 RIU. The error is for two standard deviations on the regression, calculated using Ordinary Linear Least Square (OLLS) regression.
A non-limitative example related to detection of β-Lactamase using the SPR instrument 100 of
Detection of β-Lactamase
A monolayer of the N-hydroxysuccinimide ester of the 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid (NHS-MHA) is formed by contact of the bare Au film surface of the glass slide 202 of the SPR sensor 112 with a 5 mM solution of NHS-MHA overnight. For example, NHS-MHA can be prepared according the procedure published in Reference [Masson, J. F., Battaglia, T. M., Khairallah, P., Beaudoin, S., Booksh, K. S., Anal. Chem., 79 (2007) 612]. Following a thorough rinse of the NHS-MHA monolayer with ethanol and thereafter with Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS), the metallized Au surface of the SPR sensor 112 is reacted with anti-β-lactamase (QED Bioscience inc.) prepared at 37 μg/mL in refrigerated PBS pH 7.4. The reaction is carried out overnight in a 4° C. environment to minimize antibody degradation. Thereafter, the samples are rinsed with PBS and reacted for 10 minutes in a 1 M aqueous solution of ethanolamine hydrochloride adjusted at a pH of 8.5 with 10 M NaOH. The slide 120 is then stored in PBS at 4° C. for at least 60 minutes prior to use.
A solution at 700 nM of β-lactamase is prepared in PBS at 4° C. by the dilution of a stock solution. This solution is kept at 4° C. until 20 minutes prior to use, and is then equilibrated at room temperature for the analyses. The following measurements were performed without the use of a flow cell. A SPR sensor 112 with the β-lactamase specific monolayer is placed onto the long face 111 of the BK7 dove prism 101 of the SPR instrument 100 and PBS at room temperature is placed on the SPR sensor 112 for 10 minutes in order to stabilize the SPR sensor 112. A spectral reference (S-polarized light) is acquired immediately before the real-time measurement is started. PBS is measured for 5 minutes to acquire a baseline response and is thereafter replaced with the β-lactamase solution for 20 minutes. Finally, the PBS sensor 112 is placed again in PBS for 5 minutes verifying if the binding between the anti-β-lactamase and β-lactamase is reversible.
Data Analysis Methodologies
The SPR sensor 112 responds to refractive indices with a shift of the wavelength at which the SPR phenomena occurs. Therefore, the data processing methodology used for the determination of the refractive index change will be accurate and sensitive to small changes of spectral position, contrary to the intensity in most spectroscopic applications. Moreover, the noise of the measured response will also be minimized. It is common to use a minimum finding algorithm by mathematically fitting a second order polynomial to the SPR spectra and determining the minimum from the zero of the derivative of the second order polynomial (
As described herein above, the fluidic cell 201 is designed to deliver samples to the SPR sensor 112 using the syringe pump. The syringe pump has a variable flow rate between 0.5 mL/min (8.3 μL/s) to 6.5 mL/min (108 μL/s). The results presented thereafter were obtained at 16 μL/s. To measure the reproducibility of the SPR measurement, the SPR sensor 112 is consecutively exposed for 5 minutes to 18 MO water and then for another 5 minutes to PBS, for a total of four cycles (
A significant decrease of the noise on the SPR response is observed from denoising the raw SPR spectra with singular value decomposition. A further decrease of the noise on the SPR spectra is observed for data processing using the (a−b)/(a+b) algorithm. The continuous measurement of the SPR response for a water sample with the fluidic cell 201 is used to calculate the resolution for each data analysis methodologies (Table 1).
Two standard deviations on the mean measurement of the SPR response during a 2-minute exposition to water at a flow rate of 16 μL/s and dividing this value by the sensitivity calculates the resolution. Using minimum hunting without singular value decomposition, the resolution on the refractive index measured is 3×10−6 RIU. Singular value decomposition denoising the raw spectrum improves the resolution to 1×10−6 RIU. Therefore, an improvement by a factor of 3 of the resolution is observed when denoising the data using singular value decomposition with minimum hunting. In comparison, the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b) significantly improves the resolution compared to the minimum hunting algorithm. A resolution of 9×10−7 RIU and 1.5×10−7 RIU is respectively observed for data processing using the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b) without denoising and with singular value decomposition denoising. Therefore, a greater improvement is observed by denoising the data prior to processing with the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b) compared with the minimum hunting algorithm. This greater improvement on the resolution observed for denoising using the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b) may be due to the methodology of data processing. The main factor limiting the resolution for the minimum hunting procedure is the accuracy of the polynomial fit of the SPR minimum. The random noise on the SPR spectra does not alter significantly the shape of the spectra. Thus, the fit of the second order polynomial for minimum hunting is only slightly improved by denoising. For the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b), the resolution is mainly limited by the random noise on the measurement. In this case, the reduction of the noise from random fluctuations on the spectrum significantly impacts the resolution of the SPR response. This results in a greater reduction of the noise and it improves significantly the resolution of the SPR instrument. The resolution in the 10−7 RIU range rivals with the best SPR instruments and is adequate for high resolution SPR biosensing. Resolutions were reported for angular interrogation SPR at 5×10−7 RIU, at 1.4×10−6 RIU for fiber optic SPR, at approximately 10−5 RIU for wavelength interrogation SPR, and at 5×10−5 RIU for intensity measurement SPR(SPR imaging). The significantly improved resolution obtained with the SPR instrument 100 comprising a BK7 dove prism 101 compared to other wavelength interrogation instrument is due to the data processing methodology and to a single angle excitation of the SPR phenomena. Other wavelength interrogation techniques do not impinge the SPR sensor at a unique angle. This results in a broader SPR spectrum and it decreases the resolution of other multi-wavelength SPR instruments.
To exhibit the potential to measure solutions with a small refractive index difference, a calibration curve was constructed for sucrose solutions with a refractive index between 1.333 and 1.334 (
β-Lactamase Biosensing
The SPR instrument is characterized for biosensing with a model biological system. A bioassay for β-lactamase is performed with the immobilization of anti-β-lactamase on a monolayer of N-hydroxysuccinimide ester of 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid (NHS-MHA). Immobilization of antibodies to a NHS-MHA monolayer has been demonstrated to maximize sensitivity in a direct bioassay format [Masson, J. F., Battaglia, T. M., Cramer, J., Beaudoin, S., Sierks, M., Booksh, K. S., Anal. Bioanal. Chem., 386 (2006) 1951]. β-lactamase is an appropriate biological model system due to its role in the resistance to traditional antibiotics, a commonly occurring problem in patients. The presence of β-lactamase is one of the most common factor in antibiotic resistance. However, the detection technique for antibiotics resistance still relies on standard microbiological methodologies, limiting the time required to perform the assay and the throughput of the assay for antibiotics resistance. Hence, detection of β-lactamase using SPR biosensors would offer improved methodology to quantify β-lactamase compared to actual detection techniques.
The detection of β-lactamase is performed in a PBS solution at nM concentration (
SPR Imaging
SPR imaging increases in popularity due to the multiplex array format allowing for the analysis of multiple molecules simultaneously in a single sample. The SPR instrument 100 of
The above described SPR instrument 100 can be used to perform biosensing with the SPR multi-wavelength and imaging configurations. The SPR instrument 100 combines low cost and off-the-shelf optical components with high resolution of the measured response. Depending on the data analysis methodology employed to process raw SPR spectra, the resolution varies between 3×10−6 RIU and 1.5×10−7 RIU. Fitting a second-order polynomial to the SPR spectra results in a resolution lower than using the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b). Denoising the data with singular value decomposition and reconstitution with the components containing the chemical information improves the resolution by approximately one order of magnitude. Therefore, the combination of the algorithm (a−b)/(a+b) and denoising with singular value decomposition increases the resolution. Depending on the spectrophotometer being used, the refractive index accessible ranges from 1.33 to 1.39 RIU with a 550-850 nm spectrophotometer and from 1.33 to 1.42 RIU with a 550-1100 nm spectrophotometer. The measurement of repeated injection of PBS is demonstrated with a fluidic cell 201 resulting in a reproducibility of the measurement of <1% with the dove prism SPR instrument 100.
It should be noted that the BK7 dove prism 101 could be replaced by any other suitable prism capable of performing substantially the same function. The same applies to the other components of the SPR instrument 100, the SPR sensor 112 and the fluidic cell 201.
Although the present invention has been described hereinabove with reference to illustrative embodiments thereof, these embodiments can be modified at will, within the scope of the appended claims, without departing from the nature, spirit and scope of the subject invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CA2009/001389 | 9/30/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/21/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/037227 | 4/8/2010 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110310383 A1 | Dec 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61136743 | Sep 2008 | US |