This invention relates to the detection of a molecular species using heterodyned laser light.
There has been long recognized a desire to automate the analysis of a wide variety of substances including chemical and biochemical materials, contaminants, biological warfare agents, and generally any substance, the presence and/or amount of which is desired to be determined. In recent years, on-chip systems have been developed for molecular diagnostics, e.g., for the detection of antigens by combination with antibodies or the analysis of nucleic acids via hybridization. The systems require the mixing of conjugate antibodies or the use of fluorescent antibodies or hybridizing fluorescent molecules during preparation, and, while being miniaturized nevertheless still require macroscopic techniques such as external light sources, external electro-optical detectors, and electronic instrumentation, all of which significantly limit the size and flexibility of such on-chip devices. Particularly as would be applied to military operations there is a need for fully integrated, field portable, and sensitive chip technology which can work reliably in demanding situations. Simply scaling down existing technologies, such as fluorescent measurement schemes, to the chip scale does not provide effective solutions. Moreover, any new technology must minimize meticulous sample preparation and handling steps, which limits the robustness of current technologies.
There has also been a growing need to develop microscale devices that can manipulate and transport relatively small volumes of fluids. These devices have applications in many areas of engineering, including propulsion and powered generation of micro-satellites, micro-air vehicles, inkjet printer heads, and bioanalytical instruments. See for example “PIV measurements of a microchannel flow” by C. D. Meinhart et al., Experiments in Fluids (1999) 414-419, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. When dealing with minute quantities of contaminants, for example, methods of separating or isolating the molecules to be diagnosed become important. Electrophoretic systems have been developed which aid in such techniques. Such systems separate molecules by their unique directed motions in an electric field.
In recent years, lasers have been put to use in molecular diagnostics. Robert Frankel et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,637,458 (the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference) describes a system for biomolecular separation and detection of a molecular species that uses a solid state laser detector formed with a sample channel. The presence of a molecular species is indicated by a frequency shift in the laser's output which is detected by optical heterodyning the laser's output with the output of a reference laser. The interior of the sample channel can, optionally, be coated with a ligand for binding a molecular species of interest. The system involves rather complex preprocessing of the sample by electro-osmotic separation in channels that are lithographically formed in a two dimensional planar substrate and/or by a nanostructural molecular sieve formed of spaced apart posts defining narrow channels. Although an attempt at integrated system is provided by U.S. Pat. No. 5,637,458, it does not entirely provide a fully integrated optical chip device.
Also recently, highly coherent semiconductors, lasers and laser arrays have been developed primarily for telecommunications applications. See for example, C. E. Zah et al., IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. Vol. 8 pp. 864-866, July 1996. In addition, widely tunable semiconductor lasers have been developed, in particular, sampled-grating distributed Bagg reflector (SGDBR) lasers. See, for example “Tunable Sampled-Grading DBR Lasers with Integrated Wavelength Monitors,” by B. Mason et al., IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, Vol. 10, No. 8 August 1998; 1085-1087 and “Ridge Waveguide Sampled Grating DBR Lasers with 22-nm Quasi-Continuous Tuning Range,” by B. Mason et al., IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, Vol. 10, No. 9 September 1998, 1211-1213. These widely tunable lasers are based on the use of two-multi-element mirrors as described in Coldren, U.S. Pat. No. 4,896,325. The foregoing also includes a Y-branch splitter with a detector in each branch for wavelength determination: Disclosures of the foregoing three publications and Coldren, U.S. Pat. No. 4,896,325 are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention provides a fully integrated optical sensor for on-chip analysis of immunoassays and molecular diagnostics. The present invention measures minute changes in the index of refraction (−10−7), within one micron of a microchannel surface, which can be the result of a specific heterogeneous chemical reaction or an antigen-antibody binding event.
The present invention does not require mixing of conjugate antibodies or fluorescent molecules during sample preparation as used in related art devices and techniques. Further, the present invention does not require external devices such as external light sources, fluorescent filters, or external recording optics. Unlike fluorescence imaging, which is a macroscopic technique that is applied to bio-chips, the present invention operates at the microscopic scale. The system has sensitivities that can detect single molecules, is fully integratable into the chip, and avoids mixing steps during sample preparation.
In particular, an integrated optical chip device usable for molecular diagnostics in what we term a tunable laser cavity sensor (TLCS) is flip chip bonded to a microfluidic chip. The TLCS is formed from a reference laser and a sensor laser, each comprising a waveguide having a gain section, a partially transmissive mirror section, and a coherent light beam output section, one or both of the waveguides having a phase control section. The light beam output sections of the reference and sensor lasers are joined to enable the coherent light from these sections to interfere, providing a heterodyned frequency. The sensor laser has a thinned waveguide region exposing evanescent field material to form a cavity and which detects the presence of a molecule by a heterodyned frequency shift.
Referring to
Referring additionally to
The fluidic channels 18 and 20 can be formed by deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) into a 300 micron thick Si wafer. DRIE provides an excellent means for machining high aspect ratio channels with good tolerances. Access ports 19 and 21 respectively, for the inlet and outlet channels 18 and 20 are etched into the bottom of the Si substrate. The inlet and outlet channels 18 and 20 are etched through the entire depth of the wafer. The opening 16 which connects to the sensor laser cavity is formed by a nominally 100×100 micron channel etched between the inlet and outlet channels 18 and 20 on the top surface of the chip 14. A glass cover slip 23 seals the access ports 19 and 20 and is provided with corresponding openings 25 and 27.
In the embodiment shown in
The TLCS optical sensor element is shown schematically in FIG. 2. Two distributed-bragg reflector (DBR) tunable lasers 22 and 24 are integrated with a Y-branch coupler 26 and a photodetector 28. One of the DBR tunable lasers 22 is a reference laser, the other 24 being a sensor laser. The photodetector 28 provides heterodyne detection of small changes in amplitude or frequency of the sensor laser 24 relative to the reference laser 22. As is known, the frequencies of the reference and sensor lasers can be set, as indicated at 30 and 31 by adjustment of the control sections, more particularly by adjustment of the respective gain 32, 34 and phase 36, 38 sections of the waveguides. Each waveguide has a partially transmissive grating mirror section 40 and 42 and a coherent light beam output section 44 and 46 which are joined at the mixer detector section 28.
The interactive region 29 of the sensor waveguide is formed between the gain and phase control sections, respectively 34 and 38, and the sampled grating mirror section 42. However, the particular order of the components between the mirrors is not critical and other configurations are equally useable. Thus, all permutations of the locations of the gain section 34, phase control section 38 and interactive region 29 can be used. For example, the order from the cleaved facet 24 (
As shown, the frequency output of the sensor waveguide differs by ±Δλ from the frequency of their reference waveguide. By adjusting the tuning electrodes as shown in
Referring to
As in Frankel et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,637,458, the surface of the cavity 48 can be coated with various ligands, such as capture antibodies, various binding molecules, or reactive molecules. After flip-chip bonding to the Si microfluidic chip, as described hereinafter, the thin waveguide region 48 then forms one side of an interaction chamber in which analytes can diffuse to the treated surface. When a particular reaction occurs on the surface, or an antigen binds to an antibody adsorbate on the surface, a change in index of refraction, Δns, will occur at the region just above the surface. Since a portion of the laser mode, Γxy, fills this transverse region, the modal index is changed by an amount, Γxy Δn. Also, the interaction region extends along the axis of the laser to fill an axial fraction Γz, of the cavity, so that the net fill-factor for region in which the perturbation takes place is Γxy Γz.
Since the lasing wavelength changes in direct proportion to the net weighted change in index (and frequency as the direct negative), the relative change in laser output wavelength, λ, (or frequency, f) is given by:
For a typical sensing configuration, Δns,=0.01, and Γxy Γz,=0.01, and assuming the average index of the laser cavity is n=3.3, then Δλ=0.05 nm, or Δf=−6 GHz@λ=1550 nm. Now, if this deviation were to be measured in the optical domain, a quarter-meter or larger spectrometer would be necessary to obtain sufficient resolution to see the effect, which would be very difficult at the chip level. However, with an integrated heterodyne detector, the shifted optical frequency can be down converted to the VHF radio frequency range where simple frequency counters can be used to measure the difference frequency with 1 Hz accuracy. Using heterodyne detection with two semiconductor lasers, a 6 GHz frequency shift can be measured with an accuracy of about 10 MHz, because this is the approximate linewidth of such lasers.
Put another way, again assuming the index shift in the small perturbation region, ns=0.1, the net fill-factor of this region relative to the volume of the guided mode can be as small as □xy□z,=(10 MHz)(3.3)/(0.1)(193 THz)=1.7×106. Then, for example, if the transverse over lap, □xy is only 0.1% (very conservative estimate of the evanescent field), the axial □z can be as small as 0.17%. Therefore, with a net laser cavity length of 500 μm, single submicron particles can be detected.
In this fully-integrated design, the channels are sufficiently small so that capillary forces can be used to fill them or alternatively, an onboard pump could be used to propel the fluid.
Details of connection and operation of the integrated optical chip of the present invention are shown in FIG. 6. The microfluidic chip 14 is shown with the direction of microchannel flow out of the plane. The chip 14 carries electrical contacts 74 and 76, respectively, for the gain and phase control of the TLCS. The sample cavity 72 of the biofluidic chip 14, (the thinned sensor cavity 48 of the TLCS) is interconnected by a gasket 78 to form a sample chamber 80 defining an interaction region. The exposed evanescent field material of the sensor chamber 48 is provided with an adsorbate layer 82. The laser guided mode is illustrated at 84 showing propagation of the laser beam along the waveguide to and from the sensor mirror section 42 adjacent the sampled grating mirror 43.
As shown, the InP optical sensor chip measures slight frequency shifts due to evanescent wave interactions with the fluid medium in the sample chamber 80, which serves as a diffusion-dominated region where analytes can diffuse to the adsorbate layer 82. The adsorbate layer, which can be referred to as an interaction layer, can be formed as a capture antibody for immunoassays for a ligand for some chemically reactive species. When a particular reaction occurs on its surface, or an antigen binds to an antibody on the surface, a change in index of refraction will occur adjacent the surface, and this changes the lasing frequency. The inclusion of an “interaction region within the cavity 48 of the sensor laser provides for a change in the modal index of refraction (gain or loss) within this region due to the surface absorption or chemical interaction, which overlap the evanescent fields of the laser mode.
The relative frequency change, Δf/f, of the laser is just equal to the relative modal index change times a fill factor, ΓΔn/n, and this frequency change, Δf, can be measured very accurately in the radio frequency (RF) range after down conversion by mixing with the unperturbed laser in the heterodyne detector, to measure changes in modal index of refraction inside the sensor laser cavity 48 with a resolution estimated at about Δf/f=10 MHz/200 THz˜10−7.
Antibody immobilization strategies utilizable with this invention can exhibit high sensitivity and high selectivity. For example, using antibodies immobilized to polystyrene and using waveguide illumination of fluorescence, it has previously been demonstrated that cTnI (troponinI) can be detected down to 1 pm. Sensitivity has been reported in the literature down to the fM range using thin-film silicon oxynitride waveguides approximately 1 micron thick; see Plowman et al., 1996. In a similar fashion, DNA has been detected down to the 50 fM level using evanescent planar waveguides with covalently attached capture oligonucleotides probes within twelve minutes; see Bucach et al. 1999.
In many situations it may be desired to detect more than one kind of molecular species or more than one kind of interaction. This may be possible by sweeping the wavelengths of the reference and sensor lasers by applying suitable currents to the control electrodes and observing characteristic resonances in the index measurement vs. λ. The use of a widely-tunable laser such as a sampled-grating DBR will facilitate this option.
Another approach to detect a multiplicity of species is to use a one-dimensional TLCS array on the same chip, as illustrated in
Depending upon the binding chemistry deposited on the sensor cavity, each sensor cavity could measure a different constituent of the flow, such as pH, temperature, antigen, etc. A single fluidic flow cell doses each interaction region TLCS. The practical number of TLCS array elements and thus sensed properties, is mainly limited by the desired to finite chip size. The active elements, including the two DBR lasers are spaced, e.g., by about 500 μm so as to allow space for flip-chip contacts and to avoid cross talk. Thus, the device is applicable to the analysis of a broad range of chemical and biological assays. For example, one could test for such biological warfare agents as Botulinium Toxin, Ebala and Anthrax, by using Ovalbumin, MSZ and Bacillus Globigil to simulate the invasion by such warfare agents into a human bloodstream. Again, spectral index information can also supplement the index information at each element if the wavelengths are varied across some range.
In a further embodiment of the invention, illustrated in
When a biological particle exhibits a positive dielectrophoretic constant, the particles can be induced toward the DEP electrodes and will be less likely to deposit on the laser sensor cavity area.
DEP has been used to increase particle concentrations, separate particles, and capture particles with relatively low voltages compared to electrophoresis. Miles et al., (1999) used DEP to manipulate DNA, Bacillus globigii spores and Erwinia herbicola bacteria. They demonstrated the feasibility of capturing DNA molecules using DEP, with a relatively simple microfluidic device. While Washizu et al. (1994, 1995), used DEP to stretch and position DNA molecules and biopolymers. DEP coupled with field-flow-fractionation has been used successfully to separate polystyrene beads. Wang et al (1998), and to separate human breast cancer cells from normal blood cells, Yang et al. (1999). The technique of this invention therefore builds upon established technology in the field of optical immunosensors. These sensors use optical detection techniques to determine the presence and concentration of antigens by monitoring antigen/antibody binding reactions to capture antibodies that are immobilized to a wall, Rabbany et al. (1994).
The dielectrophoresis force of a lossless dielectric sphere is given by Jones (1995) as
where ε1 and ε2 are the permittivity of the fluid medium and the lossles dielectric sphere, R is the radius of the sphere, Eo is the applied electric field. The dielectric constant K can be written using the Clausius-Mossotti function (Jones, 1995)
Equation (I) indicates the DEP force is proportional and parallel to the gradient of the electric field squared, and proportional to the cube of the sphere radius. The DEP force is present only for spatially varying electric fields and works in either AC or DC fields. If the permittivity of a particle is greater than its surrounding medium, then K>0 and the particle is said to have a positive dielectrophoretic constant and is attracted in increasing electric fields.
Bahaj and Bailey (1979) state that for geometrically similar electrodes, the DEP force scales as
where V is the magnitude of the applied voltage and Le is the effective length of the electrodes. Therefore, smaller geometries will increase the sensitivity of a particle to the dielectrophoretic effect (Jones, 1995). In addition, for a constant DEP force decreasing the geometric length scale, allows for a reduction in the applied voltage.
In the case of conductive losses, the DEP constant K can be a function of the applied voltage frequency. Therefore, the magnitude and direction of the DEP force can be manipulated by varying the voltage frequency. The biological particles that exhibit K<0 can be passively levitated using DEP so that they will be less likely to deposit on channel walls. When high-sensitivity detection is desired, the electric field can be adjusted (i.e. in magnitude and frequency) so that the concentration of particles near the laser sensor interface is increased, making the molecular detection more sensitive.
In fabricating the TLCS chip, known InP growth and fabrication procedures and DBR laser fabrication characterization procedures can be used. Existing 3-D beam propagation modeling (BPM) software can be utilized to provide inclusion of lateral and transverse variations in straight guides, such as in the interaction region, as well as the actual variations in bends, such as in the Y-branches offset regions for gain and detector circuitry, as shown in
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
As shown in
Referring again to
The captured chemistry can be deposited on the small 3 μm×500 μm interaction region of the laser cavity sensor. When an array of multiple laser cavity sensors are used in a single microfluidic channel, adjacent laser cavities, which are positioned approximately 500 μm apart, are each coated with a separate reference chemistry.
The detector signal from the heterodyne-mixed laser cavity sensor will contain a beat frequency, which will correspond to the amount of bound target analyte. The relationship between the beat-frequency versus time occurred and the target species concentration can be characterized. One way of handling the beat -frequency versus time relationship is to measure the time evolution of the beat frequency. One can then correlate the curve to a known concentrate of analyte, and a known flow condition.
While the invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments, various modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention.
The following references are each incorporated herein by reference:
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/221,624, filed Jul. 28, 2000.
This invention was made with Government Support under Grant No. DAAD19-00-1-0400, awarded by the Department of the Army, and Grant No. N00014-96-1-G014, awarded by the Office of Naval Research. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
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5637458 | Frankel et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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PCTEP9900401 | Jul 1999 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20020031838 A1 | Mar 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60221624 | Jul 2000 | US |