The invention relates to a method and a magnetic sensor device for detecting magnetized particles in a sample chamber. Moreover, it relates to the use of such a device.
From the WO 2005/010543 A1 and WO 2005/010542 A2 a magnetic sensor device is known which may for example be used in a microfluidic biosensor for the detection of (e.g. biological) molecules labeled with magnetic beads. The microsensor device is provided with an array of sensor units comprising wires for the generation of a magnetic field and Giant Magneto Resistance devices (GMRs) for the detection of stray fields generated by magnetized beads. The resistance of the GMRs is then indicative of the number of the beads near the sensor unit.
A problem with magnetic biosensors of the aforementioned kind is that the measurements are very sensitive to uncontrollable parameter variations in the applied excitation and sensor currents, sensor gain, temperature and the like.
Based on this situation it was an object of the present invention to provide means for making the measurements of magnetic sensor devices more robust against variations of their operating conditions.
This object is achieved by a magnetic sensor device according to claim 1, a method according to claim 2, and a use according to claim 11. Preferred embodiments are disclosed in the dependent claims.
The magnetic sensor device according to the present invention serves for the detection of magnetized particles, for example of magnetic beads that label target molecules in a sample. It comprises the following components:
The excitation current as well as the sensor current are typically provided by some power supply unit, for example a constant current source.
In general, a dependence of a signal on some influence should be defined in a practical sense, i.e. the signal may for example be assumed to be dependent on the influence if that influence can change the signal by more than 5% of its mean value.
A direct approach to isolate the desired particle-dependent component in the measurement signal of a magnetic sensor device is to suppress all components which do not depend on the presence of magnetic particles. In contrast to this, the described magnetic sensor device comprises an evaluation unit for processing the measurement signal in such a way that a reference component is determined that does expressively not depend on the presence of magnetized particles in the sample chamber. The reference component will therefore typically comprise information relating purely to the magnetic sensor device and the prevailing operating conditions. This information can for example be exploited when the measurement signal is interpreted with respect to the particle-dependent components of interest. If the reference component depends on the excitation current and/or the sensor current, it will share the frequency character of these currents, which eases its detection. Moreover, this dependence implies that the reference component goes back to a similar chain of physical processes as the particle-dependent signal of interest and therefore reflects the operating conditions relevant for that signal of interest. If the reference component depends on the sensor gain, it directly reflects a crucial parameter of the signal processing.
The invention further relates to a method for detecting magnetized particles in a sample chamber, the method comprising the following steps:
The method comprises in general form the steps that can be executed with a magnetic sensor device of the kind described above. Therefore, reference is made to the preceding description for more information on the details, advantages and improvements of that method.
In the following, preferred embodiments of the invention are described that relate both to the proposed magnetic sensor device and the method.
In a first particular embodiment of the invention, the reference component is dependent on a magnetic field acting on the magnetic sensor element. The reference component therefore includes information about the path on which magnetic fields are sensed by the magnetic sensor element, particularly about the dependence of the measurement signal on variations of the prevailing magnetic fields (i.e. about the sensor gain). In a preferred embodiment of this approach, the reference component is dependent on the self-magnetization of the magnetic sensor element which describes the effects of a magnetic field generated by the sensor current on the magnetic sensor element itself.
In another embodiment of the invention, which may particularly be realized in combination with the aforementioned one, the reference component is dependent on the capacitive and/or inductive cross-talk between the magnetic field generator and the magnetic sensor element. Such cross-talk is practically unavoidable if electrical conductors are located close to each other. While the cross-talk is usually considered as an undesirable disturbance, it is exploited here to generate a useful reference component. In a preferred embodiment, the reference component depends on the capacitive and/or inductive cross-talk (which is related to the excitation current) and simultaneously on the self-magnetization of the sensor element (which is related to the sensor current) in such a way that it comprises the product of the sensor and the excitation current, as well as the sensor gain. The reference component then shows the same frequency dependence as the signal of interest (which depends—via sensed magnetic reaction fields of magnetized particles—on the excitation current and the sensor current) and therefore reflects the relevant operating conditions for this signal.
In a further development of the invention, variations of the operating conditions are detected from the determined reference component. As the reference component is independent of the presence of magnetic particles, it is not changed by the introduction of magnetized particles into a sample chamber. Variations of the reference component occurring in the time before and during a measurement must therefore be due to changes in the operating conditions, i.e. such changes can be detected and separated from the influence of the magnetized particles on the measurement signal.
In another embodiment of the invention, a particle-dependent component of the measurement signal, which is indicative of the amount of magnetized particles in the sample chamber, is corrected with the help of the reference component. In combination with the aforementioned approach, said correction may particularly be based on detected variations of the operating conditions.
According to still another embodiment of the invention, the measurement signal is processed only at at least one given frequency. Such a frequency may particularly be the difference between the first and the second frequency (or the differences between all pairs of first and second frequencies, if there are several such frequencies in the excitation current and/or the sensor current). Restricting the processing to particular frequencies allows to isolate signal components which are due to particular physical effects.
There are various different possibilities to determine the reference component from the measurement signal, wherein these possibilities are of course dependent on the chosen definition of said reference component. In one preferred approach, the reference component is determined based on a phase shift between said reference component and a particle-dependent component of the measurement signal. This means that the reference component and the particle-dependent component of interest (which reflect the amount of magnetized particles) have the same frequency dependence and will therefore experience the same operating conditions of the associated hardware (amplifiers, filters etc.).
The reference component may optionally scale with the first and/or with the second frequency, i.e. be directly proportional to said frequency or to a function of said frequency. In this case, the reference component may be determined based on said scaling. Such a determination typically comprises the application of two different frequencies, wherein differences between the resulting measurement signals can be attributed to the reference component.
The invention further relates to the use of the magnetic sensor device described above for molecular diagnostics, biological sample analysis, and/or chemical sample analysis, particularly the detection of small molecules. Molecular diagnostics may for example be accomplished with the help of magnetic beads that are directly or indirectly attached to target molecules.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiment(s) described hereinafter. These embodiments will be described by way of example with the help of the accompanying drawings in which:
Like reference numbers in the Figures refer to identical or similar components.
The magnetic sensor device 100 shown in
The generated external magnetic field H1 magnetizes beads 3 in the sample chamber, wherein said beads 3 may for instance be used as labels for (bio-) molecules of interest (for more details see cited literature). Magnetic reaction fields HB generated by the beads 3 then affect (together with the excitation field H1) the electrical resistance of a nearby Giant Magneto Resistance (GMR) sensor element 2.
For measuring the magnetic reaction field HB, a sinusoidal sensor current I2 of frequency f2 is generated by a further current source 5 and conducted through the GMR sensor element 2. This sensor current I2 is expressed in equation (2) in a complex representation and with a (constant, real) amplitude Is.
The voltage uGMR that can be measured across the GMR sensor 2 then provides a sensor signal indicative of the resistance of the GMR sensor 2 and thus of the magnetic fields it is subjected to.
Equation (6) expresses the total resistance of the GMR sensor 2, RGMR, as the sum of a constant (ohmic) term R0 and a variable term ΔR that depends via the sensor gain s on the total magnetic field HGMR prevailing in the GMR element 2.
Equation (7) gives the measurement signal uGMR that is generated by the GMR sensor 2 and processed by an evaluation unit 10 (
A problem of the described magnetic sensor is that the sensor sensitivity s may vary during measurements. Moreover, variations of the sensor current amplitude Is and the excitation current amplitude Iex may occur, as well as gain and phase variations in the pre-processing electronics. It is therefore desirable to provide a calibration signal (called “reference component” in the following) without the use of a reference sensor, wherein such a reference component allows compensation for variations in the sensor sensitivity s, as well as in the sensor and excitation currents and in the measurement electronics.
The aforementioned objective is achieved by a decomposition of the (complex) sensor signal uf of equation (8) in an “in-phase” component and a “quadrature” component. This is illustrated in
As was already mentioned, the vector uf(0) represents the total (measurable) signal at Δf in the absence of magnetic beads (time 0), and the vector uf(t) represents the total (measurable) signal at Δf in the presence of magnetic beads (time t).
The Q-component uQ is determined by the self-magnetization of the GMR sensor and is independent of magnetic labels on the sensor surface. Therefore the Q-component can be used as a reference for robust processing and accurate calibration of the sensor sensitivity.
It should be noted that the parameters α, β, γ, ε are all fixed by the geometry of the sensor and will thus not change during measurements. These values may however vary among different sensors, which can be taken into account by an individual calibration procedure for each device.
It should further be noted that all vectors in
According to
In contrast to this, the application of a full IQ-detector is proposed here, wherein said detector determines both the I-component as well as the Q-component. The Q-component then provides the desired reference component serving as a calibration signal without the use of a reference sensor.
The amplitudes AI and AQ of the I-component and the Q-component are defined in equations (9) and (10). According to equation (12), the ratio of these amplitudes AI and AQ provides a quantity that is independent of the sensor sensitivity and the applied current amplitudes, where the constants α, β, γ, ε are all fixed by the sensor geometry and B is the bead density. Calculating the ratio AI/AQ in the absence of beads (i.e. at time 0 prior to a biological test) and at time t in the presence of beads, therefore allows to determine the bead density B independent of the (possibly time-variable) sensor sensitivity and the applied currents.
In the following, another method than using an IQ-detector for the determination of the I-component and the Q-component will be described with reference to
Instead of making an orthogonal decomposition of the filtered sensor output signal uf, in this embodiment only the amplitudes Af and Af′ of the sensor signal are measured at the difference frequencies Δf=f1−f2 and Δf′=N·f1−f2, i.e. the lengths of vectors uf(0), uf(t), uf′(0), uf′(t).
It should be noted that the phase transfer of the pre-processing electronics at Δf and Δf′ may be different, which results in a rotation of the axes of diagram (b) with respect to diagram (a). This effect is taken into account here by assigning different demodulation vectors udem, udem′.
Again the amplitudes Af and Af′ of the measurement vectors uf, uf′ can be detected at time 0 in the absence of beads, i.e. prior to the assay experiment, and then at time t in the presence of beads. From measurements with both frequencies f1 and N·f1, the amplitude AQ of the Q-component uQ can then be extracted according to equation (13), which is valid for both times 0 and t. It is assumed in this respect that amplification of the electronics is equal for Δf and Δf′. This can be accomplished by choosing the second excitation frequency f1′ and a second sensor frequency f2′ such that Δf and Δf′ are close, e.g. Δf−Δf′=10 kHz. Alternatively, the frequencies can be chosen such that Δf=Δf′, and the two measurements can be time-multiplexed.
Equation (13) further contains an expression for the magnitude A1 of the in-phase I-component uI (valid both at time 0 and t). With these relations, the same calculations as in equation (12) can be done, i.e. the bead density B can be determined independent of the sensor sensitivity s and the applied currents.
While the invention was described above with reference to particular embodiments, various modifications and extensions are possible, for example:
Finally it is pointed out that in the present application the term “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, that “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality, and that a single processor or other unit may fulfill the functions of several means. The invention resides in each and every novel characteristic feature and each and every combination of characteristic features. Moreover, reference signs in the claims shall not be construed as limiting their scope.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06126391.9 | Dec 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2007/055114 | 12/14/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/12/2009 |