The present invention is mainly concerned with a method and an apparatus for measuring a force on at least one particle in a fluid. In further aspects, the invention provides a computer program product and a computer-readable storage medium assisting in the measurement of a force on at least one particle in a fluid.
The use of optical tweezers to measure forces acting upon mesoscopic particles has revolutionized fields from material science to cell biology [1]-[9]. However, the application of this technology is subject to certain prerequisites regarding the refractive index of the probe, [10], and its use may be limited in biological systems due to concerns about the effect on living processes, [11], [12].
Thermoviscous flows can be used for the positioning of particles. Thermoviscous flows have been described as the directed motion of aqueous media in response to travelling temperature fields [13], an emergent physical phenomenon driven by the thermal expansion of fluids in non-homogenous viscosity fields. In particular, thermoviscous flows have been used to transport aqueous solutions visualized by tracer particles or molecules along an optically defined path [13], [14]. More recently, it has been shown that these flows can also be induced in cells and developing embryos [15]-[17], where they give rise to a streaming of the cytoplasm, albeit with limited abilities to control the positioning of cytoplasmically immersed colloids.
An apparatus for spatially manipulating a particle in a fluid by means of hydrodynamic flows is known, e.g., from WO 2008/077630A1.
It can be considered a problem of the invention to provide a novel method and a novel apparatus for measuring forces on particles in a fluid. A further objective of the invention is to provide suitable software means assisting in the measurement of forces on particles in fluids.
This problem is solved by the method having the features of claim 1 and by the apparatus having the features of claim 33. As regards the software means, the problem of the invention is solved by the computer program product according to claim 41 and the computer-readable storage medium according to claim 42.
In the method for measuring a force on at least one particle in a fluid according to the invention (claim 1) an inhomogeneous field of hydrodynamic flows is generated in a fluid by specific dynamic localized heating events, the particle is spatially manipulated by the hydrodynamic flows, a spatial configuration of the particle(s) within the fluid is captured and at least one force acting on the particle(s) is determined by evaluating the captured spatial configuration of the particle(s).
The apparatus for measuring a force on at least one particle in a fluid according to the invention (claim 32) has the following features: a receptacle for receiving the fluid and the particle, a heating device for generating an inhomogeneous field of hydrodynamic flows within the fluid by specific dynamic localized heating events, a device for capturing at least parts of a spatial configuration of the particle(s) within the receptacle and a control unit for controlling the heating device and the device for capturing at least parts of a spatial configuration of the particle(s), for evaluating data from the device for capturing at least parts of a spatial configuration of the particle(s) and for determining at least one force acting on the particle by evaluating the spatial configuration of the particle
A computer program product according to the invention (claim 40) and a computer-readable storage medium according to the invention (claim 41) comprise, in each case, instructions which, when the program is executed by the control unit, causes the control unit to carry out a method according to the invention with the steps of
Advantageous variants of the method according to the invention and preferred embodiments of the apparatus according to the invention will be described in the following, in particular with respect to the dependent claims and the attached figures.
The apparatus according to the invention can be designed for carrying out the method according to the invention.
The instructions of the computer program product and/or of the computer-readable storage medium can in particular serve the purpose of activating the control unit to carry out the method according to one of the claims 1 to 32.
The basic idea of the invention is to use specific dynamic localized heating events to spatially manipulate particles in a fluid, to generate an inhomogeneous field of hydrodynamic flows in the fluid, to observe or capture the position of at least one particle in the inhomogeneous flow field and to derive a force acting on at least one particle by evaluating the observed configuration of the particle.
The specific dynamic localized heating events may be determined in each case in dependence of a target configuration of the particle(s) and a recently captured actual configuration of the particle(s) in the fluid. The specific dynamic localized heating events serve the purpose of generating sequences of hydrodynamic flows within the fluid. The spatial manipulation of the particles may be carried out in a closed-loop control wherein an actual captured particle configuration may serve as feedback for the determination of a specific dynamic localized heating event to be applied next.
It should generally be understood that the use of the term “target” does not necessarily imply that a particle to be manipulated and/or analysed ever reaches, e.g., a target location. In typically cases, a target location serves for the purpose of calculating the necessary specific localized heating events and the particle is, e.g., against the action of an external force, continuously pushed by the specific localized heating events in the direction of a target location.
It should also generally be understood that the term recent spatial configuration does not necessarily imply that the full coordinates of the particle(s) to be manipulated and/or analysed are known. Rather, a spatial configuration in this respect can be realized by at least one parameter or coordinate characterizing the particle(s) to be manipulated and/or analysed.
Essential advantages of the present invention are that the method as such is a non-contact trapping method based on optically induced hydrodynamic flows, i.e., the method can be applied to sensitive particles. The inventors could demonstrate a linear force-extension relationship and could detect forces in the femtonewton-range with near thermally limited sensitivity. The technology according to the invention removes the need for lasers to touch particles and there are, in principle, no material constraints on the particles that can be analysed. Furthermore, the methodology can be employed with standard optical microscopes without a requirement for special chambers, making it possible to investigate localized forces within more complex materials. Thus, optically induced hydrodynamic flows facilitate highly sensitive, non-invasive force measurements with low constraints on the nature of the sample.
The term spatial manipulation of a particle in the fluid generally means that the particle-fluid system in a receptacle is influenced, such that the particle is moved from one point to another and/or from one orientation to another as compared, e.g., to a reference frame in which the receptacle is stationary. Spatial manipulation can also mean, though, that a particle is kept at a certain position against the action of other, e.g., external forces acting on the particle.
In preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, the spatial manipulation of the particle(s) comprises at least one of: pushing or moving specified particle(s) towards specified target locations in the fluid, moving specified particle(s) along specified paths in the fluid, keeping specified particle(s) in specified target locations in the fluid, keeping specified particle(s) in specified target orientations in the fluid, pushing or moving specified particle(s) towards specified target orientation(s) in the fluid.
In preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, the field of hydrodynamic flows, at least partly in regions where particles to be analysed are present, decreases in the direction of the field. It has been found that, at least in such situations, the particle(s) to be analysed can reach a steady state.
Generally, the method and the apparatus according to the invention can be used for any kind of fluid in which hydrodynamic flows can be generated by dynamic localized heating of the fluid. In preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, the fluid is a liquid and, in particular, contains water or is water.
Generally, the method and the apparatus according to the invention can be used to manipulate any suspended particle in a fluid which can at least partly move freely in the fluid. In preferred variants of the method according to the invention, the particle(s) to be manipulated is/are at least one of the following: a biological particle, a cell, a virus, a tissue fragment, a metal particle, a composite material particle, a polymer particle, a nanoparticle, a spherical bead, a magnetic bead, a cellular organelle, or a phase-separated droplet that itself is containing protein, RNA or other biomolecules, a tethering molecule.
According to the invention, hydrodynamic flows are generated in the fluid by means of dynamic localized heating of the fluid and the manipulation of a particle is achieved by the particle being carried by the generated hydrodynamic flow.
It would, in principle, also be possible to generate hydrodynamic flows with specific dynamic localized heating events having a negative sign, i.e., events where hydrodynamic flows are introduced into the fluid by means of dynamic localized cooling of the fluid and the manipulation of a particle is again achieved by the particle being carried by the generated hydrodynamic flows.
In contrast to the phenomenon of thermophoretic motion which is strongly dependent on the specific types of particles and the specific liquid surrounding these particles, the general principle of the mechanism underlying the present invention is independent of the specific nature of the particles. In a thermophoretic motion, different particles will generally move differently, e.g., at different speeds and even in different directions. In hydrodynamic flows, as being used in the present invention, the particles will move essentially according to the physics of hydrodynamics. The mechanism of the present invention is governed essentially only by the thermodynamic properties of the used fluid, e.g., water. In the case where electromagnetic radiation, e.g. a laser, is used for heating the sample, the optical properties of the fluid also play an important role. The hydrodynamic flows generated by dynamic localized heating of the fluid are also termed thermoviscous flows.
In principle, the dynamic localized heating of the fluid can be brought about by any energy deposition into the fluid which leads to the intended thermoviscous flows. E.g., the dynamic localized heating can be introduced by specific heating devices attached to the receptacle via heat-conducting connections and which are selectively heated. In preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, the dynamic localized heating of the fluid is brought about by a laser or an infrared laser.
In another preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, the dynamic localized heating of the fluid is brought by light emitting diodes, e.g., infrared light emitting diodes.
Correspondingly, in a preferred embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention, the heating device has a laser for providing the energy for the dynamic localized heating and optical means, such as a scanner, galvo-scanner, quasistatic scanner, a spatial light modulator, acousto-optical scanner, or any other suitable device, for relaying heating laser radiation to variable, controlled locations in the fluid, and enabling the dynamic scanning of the heating laser beam across the sample.
An optical assembly as described in WO 2008/077630A1 can be used for the dynamic localized heating of the fluid. In this regard, the respective contents of WO 2008/077630A1 are included in the present disclosure.
In preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, the dynamic localized heating events of the fluid are brought about by repetitive scanning of a focal volume of the laser along an especially selected path or a trajectory in the sample.
More specifically, the determination of the specific dynamic localized heating events to be determined to the fluid can comprise the determination of at least one of: 2-dimensional scan path in the fluid, 3-dimensional scan path in the fluid, laser intensity, laser scanning speed, scanning frequency of the laser, number of times the scanning path is scanned.
A specific dynamic localized heating event can comprise only one scan of a laser scan path or many, e.g., 100, scans of the same laser scan path.
Application of the specific dynamic localized heating as determined means that the determined dynamic heating pattern is applied to the fluid. This can be done only once or a plurality of times one after another. The heating device of the apparatus according to the invention will then correspondingly be activated by the control unit.
Generally, a scan path can be anywhere in the receptacle, and can consist of one or more straight or arbitrary shaped segments of arbitrary length, which need not necessarily be continuous. A scan path can be parallel to a connecting vector between a target destination and an actual position of the particle. The scan path can for example either be centred on the particle, ending slightly before it, or starting slightly after it. Many other variants are possible in this regard. The laser scan can be applied along the path, with a typical scan rate of, e.g., 1-3 kHz, which is sufficiently slow to allow for the relaxation of temperature fields between successive scan periods. The scan rate can vary along the scan path.
In further preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, the paths along which the laser is scanned can be chosen, such that the heating radiation does not hit the particle(s) to be manipulated and analysed. I.e., the particle(s) is (are) spatially manipulated essentially without being contacted by heating laser radiation. The danger of the particles as such, or the receptacle, e.g., living cells or embryos, to be influenced or harmed by the heating radiation is thereby minimized.
In further preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, a scan rate of the repetitive scanning is chosen, such that temperature fields in the sample can relax between successive scans. A general heating of the sample can thus be avoided.
The specific dynamic localized heating events to be applied to the fluid can further be individualized by being determined also in dependence of a mobility of particle(s) in the fluid. The accuracy of the manipulation, in particular the positioning, can thus be further improved. The mobility of particles to be manipulated can be derived from the observed data.
For the receptacle, which receives the fluid and the particles to be manipulated, components known in the art can be used. It is important that the receptacle allows the specific dynamic localized heating to be introduced into the fluid. E.g., the receptacle described in WO 2008/077630A1 can be used for carrying out the invention. In this regard, the respective contents of WO 2008/077630A1 are included in the present disclosure.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the receptacle has means for controlling the basic temperature of the fluid.
The control unit for controlling the heating device and the imaging device and for evaluating image data from the imaging device can typically be a PC or equivalent devices, with peripheral components as known in the art.
ANSPRUCH 33 The device for capturing at least parts of a spatial configuration of the particle(s) can be any device that is able to capture a signal which encodes at least parts of a spatial configuration of the particles. This device can in particular be an optical device and can, e.g., be at least one of an imaging device, a lenseless camera, a quadrant photodiode.
The imaging device serves the purpose of capturing actual configurations of the particles to be manipulated in the fluid. It can be any, in particular optical, device with which at least the portions of the receptacle can be captured or imaged which contain particles to be manipulated. In preferred embodiments of the invention, the imaging device is a microscope. The microscope can be a computer-controlled microscope and does not need to allow a visual observation of the sample. Preferably, the acquisition of images is at least partly automated and image algorithms are being used for the evaluation of the captured configurations of the particles.
For example, the microscope can be designed for carrying out at least one of the following techniques: Fluorescence Microscopy, Multi-Photon Fluorescence Microscopy, Widefield Microscopy, Scanning Microscopy, Dark-Field Microscopy, Confocal Microscopy, Light Sheet Microscopy, Localization Microscopy, Structured Illumination Microscopy, Photoactivated Localization Microscopy (FPALM), Stochastic Optical Reconstruction Microscopy (STORM), Stimulated Emission Depletion Microscopy (STED), Ground State Depletion Microscopy (GSD), Saturated Pattern Excitation Microscopy, Saturated Structured Illumination Microscopy (SSIM), Light Field Microscopy (LFM), Fourier Light Field Microscopy (FLFM), Oblique Plan Microscopy (OPM).
The microscope can relay imaging radiation onto and into the sample and can relay back radiation emitted from the sample in response to the imaging radiation, e.g., fluorescence radiation, via the same microscope objective that is also used for introducing the heating radiation into the sample.
The capturing of the actual spatial configuration of the particle(s) can comprise at least one of the following: a 1-dimensional position of the particle(s), a 2-dimensional position of the particle(s), a 3-dimensional position of the particle(s), a measurement of an orientation of the particle(s) within a plane, a measurement of a 3-dimensional orientation of the particle(s) in space.
In particularly preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention the spatial configuration of the particles to be manipulated and to be analysed are evaluated over time.
For the realization of the invention, it is necessary that the field of hydrodynamic flows is inhomogeneous. An equivalent language therefore is that at least one vector component of the field of hydrodynamic flows has a non-zero gradient or, simply, that the field of hydrodynamic flows is not constant in at least a certain volume of the sample where the particle(s) to be manipulated and to be analysed are localized. In particularly preferred embodiments, though, the inhomogeneous field of hydrodynamic flows comprises at least one stagnation point. The particle(s) to be manipulated and to be analysed can then be trapped at least temporarily in the vicinity of the stagnation point. In such a situation, the hydrodynamic flows generate a quasi-potential which allows the determination of a force acting on the particle(s).
In a situation with a hydrodynamic field having a stagnation point, the capturing of the configuration of the particle to be manipulated and analysed can be an observation of a deviation of an actual position of the at least one particle from the stagnation point. The force acting on the particle can then be determined in dependence of the observed deviation.
For example, the inhomogeneous field of hydrodynamic flows comprising at least one stagnation point can be generated by at least two hydrodynamic flows directed in opposite directions toward the stagnation point. In an effort to obtain a quasi-stable situation, the at least two hydrodynamic flows directed in opposite directions can be rotated in a plane around the stagnation point.
In other preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, a stagnation point can be generated with only one hydrodynamic flow, in particular where an external force, e.g., the gravitational force is acting on the fluid, or where a physical barrier already constrains the particle in one direction, e.g., trapping against a plane surface.
More specifically, an azimuthal direction in which the at least two hydrodynamic flows directed in opposite directions are applied can be chosen in dependence of a captured spatial configuration of the particle, in particular in dependence of at least one of the measured azimuthal and radial coordinates of the particle(s) in relation to the stagnation point. In this way, a two-dimensional quasi-potential for the particle(s) to be manipulated and to be analysed can be generated.
In further preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, at least one external force is applied to the particle. The external force can be at least one of: a magnetic force, an electrostatic force, a gravitational force, frictional forces from additional flows in the system, a force exerted on a particle by a tether, in particular a molecular tether, a force generated by an optical trap, in particular an optical tweezer, a force exerted by a tethered molecule, e.g., a tethered polymer. And external force allows a quantitative determination of a force acting on a particle. In preferred variants of the invention, the external force is time-dependent or constant for at least a specified period of time. It is also possible to have oscillating external forces which allow mechanical parameters of the system fluid-particle to be determined.
For a calibration of measured forces, it can be useful to impose external forces, e.g., electrostatic, or magnetic forces, of a known magnitude on the fluid containing the particles to be manipulated and analysed. Deviations of the position of a particle from an equilibrium position in the effective potential, e.g., from a stagnation point, can then be measured in dependence of the magnitude of the external force and, thus, the magnitude of the force acting on the particle through the hydrodynamic flows can be determined.
ANSPRUCH 32 In a further preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention, the particle to be manipulated and analysed is a tethered molecule, a flow field having at least two stagnation points is generated within the fluid, and at least two portions of the tethered molecule, e.g., the terminal particles of the tethered molecule, are held in the stagnation points by the hydrodynamic flows.
It will then be possible to measure a force acting within the tethered molecule, in particular between the terminal particles, and in particular in dependence of an elongation of the tethered molecule.
A calibration of the measured forces can alternatively or additionally also be achieved by observing fluctuating movements, in particular a mean distance from an equilibrium position of the particle in the effective potential. With the assumption that the mean amount of energy in each degree of freedom is kBT (kB=Boltzmann constant, T=temperature) the force acting on the particle can be determined. In this regard, preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention are characterized in that the force acting on the particle is determined by evaluation of a statistical distribution, e.g., of the lateral positions of the particle in the vicinity of a stagnation point and a temperature of the fluid.
The invention allows in particular to study the velocity and dynamics of a trapped particle in the absence of external forces when the particle travels back to a stagnation point of a field of hydrodynamic flows.
The method of the invention is realized when one force acting on one particle is determined. By evaluating an actual spatial configuration of a particle, e.g., an orientation of a particle in relation to a surrounding field of hydrodynamic flows it is also possible to determine a torque acting on the respective particle.
In this regard, it may be useful if the fluid contains particles, e.g., fluorescent particles, such as tracer particles, which enable a capturing of the field of hydrodynamic flows. The specific localized heating events can be determined in dependence of at least one of: a recently captured spatial configuration of the particle(s) and a recently captured field of hydrodynamic flows.
As regards the spatial manipulation of the particle(s) to be analysed, the specific dynamic localized heating events to be applied to the fluids can be determined in a feedback loop. More specifically, in a preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention, at least one target spatial configuration of the particle(s) in the fluid is defined and that the following further steps are carried out:
It is possible to vary and/or adapt a number of repetitions or a repetition rate of a loop containing at least some or all of steps a) to c) of claim 1 to a specific manipulation task.
Correspondingly, a preferred embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention is characterized in that the control unit is designed for:
Definition of a target spatial configuration means that a certain configuration into which the particle or the particles to be manipulated is defined. This can, e.g., be done by a user at the computer screen on the basis of a measured actual configuration or an actual image of the particles. The definition of a target configuration can be assisted by image evaluation software which, e.g., recognizes certain structures in the measured image data. The target spatial configuration of the particle(s) in the fluid can comprise at least one of: specified target location(s) of the particle(s) in the fluid, in particular a stagnation point, specified target velocity or velocities of the particle(s) in the fluid, specified target orientation(s) of the particle(s) in the fluid, specified target rotation speed(s) of the particle(s) in the fluid.
The target spatial configuration of the particle(s) in the fluid can furthermore be a 1-dimensional localization of the particle(s), a 2-dimensional localization of the particle(s) or a 3-dimensional localization of the particle(s).
For the purposes of force measurement, a target location can in particular, be realized by a stagnation point in the flow field.
The target configuration can additionally or alternatively also include at least one of the following requirements: (a) specified particle(s) be not in a specified location, (a) specified particle(s) be as far away from (a) specified location(s) as possible, (a) specified particle(s) be at least in (a) specified distance(s) from (a) specified location(s), specified particles be as close together as possible, specified particles must not touch each other, particles of a different kind being treated differently.
A key feature of the present invention concerns, in step b), the determination of a specific dynamic localized heating event to be applied to the fluid in dependence of at least one recent actual spatial configuration of the particle(s) and a target configuration of the particle(s). In this regard, a cost function can be calculated on the basis of a recent, in particular the most recent, actual spatial configuration of the particles and a target configuration of the particles. The specific dynamic localized heating events can then be determined in dependence of the cost function. The cost function can be a scalar function of at least one recent actual spatial configuration of the particle(s) and a target configuration of the particle(s) and/or a description of the desired target configuration. A description of the target configuration can be that, e.g., all particles of a first kind should be moved to the left, and all particles of a second kind should be moved to the right side to enable an effective sorting.
For example, after an application or each application of the specific dynamic localized heating event in step c), the actual configuration can be captured and the cost function can then be calculated for the new configuration and, if the cost function has decreased from the most recent value, step c) can be repeated with the same specific dynamic localized heating event, or, if the cost function has increased from the most recent value, step b) can be carried out anew.
The method of the invention is realized when a force acting on one particle is determined. It is also possible, though, that at least two particles are simultaneously spatially manipulated and/or that forces acting on at least two particles are simultaneously determined. This means that the actual configuration of a plurality of particles is captured. The specific dynamic localized heating events can then be determined such that both (or more) particles are moved or manipulated but also such that essentially only one particle is manipulated or moved at a time. Simultaneously means in this context that the forces acting on the plurality of particles are determined from one and the same observed spatial configuration of the particles.
In principle, each particle to be manipulated can be considered individually. E.g., each particle can individually be moved to a certain location or to a certain orientation. For certain applications, though, it may be useful to consider certain types of particles. I.e., a plurality of particles to be spatially manipulated can comprise at least one subset of equivalent or identical particles The cost function can then be invariant with regard to exchange of equivalent or identical particles. The complexity of the underlying mathematical task can thus be reduced.
E.g., in a configuration with at least two particles to be manipulated, the particle being mainly manipulated, in each case, in the next step can be the particle which is farthest away from at least one of a target position and a target orientation associated with the respective particle.
More specifically, the cost function can contain at least one of the following arguments: distance of a specific particle to a specific target location of this particle, reciprocal distance of a specific particle to a specified location, distance of a specified type of particles to a specific target location of the respective type of particles, reciprocal distance of a specified type of particles to a specified location specific for the respective type of particles, angle between an actual particle orientation and a target orientation of the respective particle or the respective type of particle, difference between an actual particle velocity and a target velocity of the respective particle or the respective type of particle.
In further preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, between steps a) and b) the following further step can be carried out: the particle(s) to be manipulated is or are associated with at least one of a target position and a target orientation. Association of a particle with a specific target position means that the target position is attributed to the respective particle.
In further preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, a tracking of the particle(s) can be carried out by identifying particles present in a captured new actual configuration with particles in the most recent actual configuration. Thus, trajectories of individual particles can be derived from a sequence of actual configurations.
In further preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, after the tracking of the particles, a target configuration can be reassessed and, if the target configuration is changed to a new target configuration, the particles can then be associated, in each case, with at least one of a new target position and a new target orientation. Thus, the system can dynamically react to a change of the target configuration and can change the attribution of the particles to specific target configurations on the fly.
In further preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention, at least some of the following data can be stored in a database: previous actual spatial configurations of the particle(s), previous dynamic localized heating events applied to the fluid determined on the basis of at least a respective actual spatial configuration and a target configuration and changes in the actual spatial configurations of the particle(s) caused by the respective dynamic localized heating event applied to the fluid.
Future dynamic localized heating events to be applied to the fluid can be calculated using at least parts of the data stored in the database, in particular making use of machine learning/artificial intelligence.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be described in the following with respect to the attached figures. Therein shows:
Equal and equivalent components generally have the same numerals in the figures.
The principle underlying the present invention will be explained with reference to
For spherical non-interfering particles of a homogeneous composition and having smooth surfaces and a laminar flow, the frictional force imposed on the particle is given by Stokes' law, i.e., by
Coming back now to
The invention essentially consists in generating a suitable inhomogeneous field of hydrodynamic flows in the fluid by means of sequences of specific localized heating events applied to the fluid and by using the position-force relationship for the measurement of forces acting on the particles.
An embodiment of an apparatus 100 according to the invention will be described in the following with reference to
As essential components, the apparatus 100 as shown in
The dynamic localized heating is designed to bring about a spatial manipulation of the particles p1, p2 within the receptacle 10 by hydrodynamic flows. The fluid 12 and the particles p1, p2 contained therein, are also termed the sample.
More specifically, in the example shown in
It is clear that
The imaging means 40 in the example of
Fluorescence radiation radiated back from the sample, e.g., from dyes with which, e.g., the particles to be manipulated are prepared, or autofluorescence light travels back through the microscope objective 48, beam splitter 30, and beam splitter 46 and reaches an optical detector 50 and is detected there. The optical detector 50 can be a camera which can record images of a field of view as propagated by the optical beam path, i.e., the camera can capture an actual spatial configuration of the particles p1, p2 within the receptacle 10. Both the light source 42 and the optical detector 50 are controlled by the control unit 60 and can, in each case, send back status data to control unit 60.
In the schematic example of
According to the invention, the control unit 60 is designed for:
The control unit 60 can furthermore be designed for:
Further devices for manipulating the sample, and specifically the particles p1, p2, to be spatially manipulated, e.g., further lasers can be present in the apparatus 100 of
The control unit 60 can be a PC or a similar computing device with peripheral components as generally known in the art. The control unit 60 can have both a computer program product and a computer-readable storage medium according to the invention.
The aspects of the invention relating to the spatial manipulation using a feedback from captured spatial configurations will be described in the following with reference to
Embodiments of the invention will then be described with reference to
The upper portion of
The lower portion of
First (drawing b1), an actual spatial configuration of the particles p1, p2 is captured (step a)), e.g., an image is recorded with the camera 50 of the microscope 40 in
Then, in the example shown in
After definition of a target spatial configuration of the particles p1, p2, i.e., in the example of
According to step b) of a variant of method according to the invention, a specific dynamic localized heating event to be applied to the fluid 12 is then determined in dependence of at least one recent actual spatial configuration of the particles p1, p2, e.g., in dependence of at least the image recorded in step a) (drawing b1) and the target locations T1, T2 of the particles p1, p2.
According to step c) of this variant, the specific dynamic localized heating event as determined in step b) is applied at least once to the fluid 12. In the example shown in
Thus, the particles p1, p2 are spatially manipulated in the fluid 12 by hydrodynamic flows which are generated in the fluid 12 by means of dynamic localized heating of the fluid 12.
According to step d), at least one or all of the steps a) to c) is or are repeated. In the example shown in
A more detailed example of a method for spatially manipulating the particles will be described with reference to
According to step b) of the above method, a specific dynamic localized heating event to be applied to the fluid 12 will then be determined in step S06 “compute new FLUCS vector”, e.g., in dependence of the cost function calculated in step S05. Thus, the specific dynamic localized heating event will be dependent of at least one recent actual spatial configuration of the particles and a target configuration of the particles. It is also possible, though, that the specific dynamic localized heating event to be applied to the fluid 12 is determined irrespectively of the cost function value, e.g., by selecting the furthermost particle and pushing it towards its target.
In step S07 “apply FLUCS vector”, the specific dynamic localized heating event determined in step S06 is applied to the sample, i.e., to the fluid containing the particles to be manipulated. This corresponds to step c) of the above method.
According to step d) of the method, at least some of steps a) to c) are repeated. In the flowchart depicted in
Step S10 is a query whether or not a target configuration is to be updated. In preferred embodiments the software decides whether or not the target configuration will be updated.
In the case where the target configuration is left unchanged, the query S10 is followed by step S11 where, as in step S04, the particles to be manipulated are associated, in each case, with a target position. In the case where in response to the query in step S10 the target configuration is to be updated, a new target configuration, e.g., new target locations are defined in step S14 “define new targets” and the program continues with step S11.
Step S11 is followed by step S12 in which, as in step S05, the cost function is calculated anew for the new actual configuration of the particles as captured in step S08 and, if applicable, for the new target configuration as defined in step S14.
In step S13 it is decided whether or not the error, i.e., the cost function, has decreased as compared to the value determined in step S05.
If the cost function has, in fact, decreased from the value determined in step S05, step c) being realized in the example of
If, on the other hand, the cost function has increased from the value determined in step S05, step b) of the method is carried out anew. I.e., a new specific dynamic localized heating event to be applied to the fluid 12 will be determined in step S06 “compute new FLUCS vector” in dependence of the cost function calculated in step S12.
Thus, a closed feedback-loop control and an automated spatial manipulation of particles in a fluid are realized.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to
To achieve an optically induced, hydrodynamic trap, two opposing thermoviscous flows were generated by splitting the scanning line of a relay laser into two counterdirected paths.
This represents a weak metastable confinement as the restoring character of the trap is only observed along the compressional axis, i.e., in the horizontal direction in
To avoid such an expulsion, an active feedback control is used that enables dynamic rotation of the counterflows and rapid readjustment of the two in-plane axes (
In the terms of the claims, the inhomogeneous field of hydrodynamic flows {right arrow over (u(x))} shown in
The stiffness of the trap is tuneable as it depends on the power of the scanning laser, the frequency of scanning and the update rate of the scan paths, along with many other user-specified parameters.
Further properties of the trap can be evaluated by intermittently switching the trap on and off. The results of such measurements are illustrated in the diagram of
As soon as the laser is turned on, the particle p is dragged towards the stagnation point S corresponding to the solid lines in the diagram of
The histogram of
This can be confirmed by an analysis of the mean squared displacement (MSD) of the particle p which is illustrated in
The transition between short- and long-term diffusion is marked in the PSD plot by a corner frequency fc which allows an accurate estimation of the trap stiffness k along each orthogonal axis via:
Using this approach, one obtains a trap stiffness of 35±5 fN/μm (femtonewtons/micrometre) along the x-axis, which is at least as sensitive as that obtained with typical optical tweezers. Thus, optically induced thermoviscous flows appear able to generate highly sensitive traps without direct exposure to a laser and with only a moderate degree of heating.
To perform sensitive force measurements, it is essential that the displacement from a trapping point can be used as a readout of the force to which a particle is subjected. One can therefore investigate the force-extension relationship displayed by the optically induced hydrodynamic trap. For the determination of the velocity-distance relationship one can use a Stokes' drag calibration, i.e., an approach which has also been used to verify the approximately harmonic trapping potential generated by optical tweezers.
One can displace a trapped particle away from the stagnation point and then follow its relaxation behaviour. The inventors observed an exponential approach of the particle to the stagnation point, suggesting a linear velocity-displacement relationship, where a particle displaced further from the trap is dragged towards the stagnation point at a faster rate, reminiscent of a Hookean spring. The trapping timescale in optical tweezer experiments is given by:
This can be used to obtain a second estimate of the trap stiffness. This estimate produced a value as low as 33±3 fN/μm and thus agreed closely with the previous PSD roll-off estimate. Given the linear force-displacement relationship, these results suggest that the optically induced hydrodynamic trapping approach of the invention can be used to measure forces in the femtonewton range.
External forces can be used to further confirm the properties of the trap and can also serve the purpose of calibration. This will be described in connection with
Increasing the current allows the particle to explore a larger region of space for the same acquisition duration, reflecting the enhanced magnetic pulling forces. By extracting the long-time (steady-state) velocity of the particle in each case, it is possible to calibrate the magnetic forces through a force balance with a known Stokes' drag force via the expression
Next, the inventors asked if the apparent spring constant that was indicated by the particle dynamics in the absence of external forces can be confirmed when pulling on the particle using an external force. This will be described with reference to
The application of a driving current to the electromagnet M and the subsequently induced magnetic field results in pulling the particle away from the stagnation point. This is shown in
The magnitude of the shift depends on the magnetic force strength, and larger currents produce larger displacements from the stagnation point.
This is illustrated with reference to
By relating the applied current to the calculated magnetic force, the linear force-extension relationship can be fitted and, thus, yet another estimate of the counterflow trap stiffness can be obtained. This is illustrated in
The explicit application of an external force confirms that equilibrium thermodynamics can indeed be used to accurately describe the relaxation dynamics following a positional perturbation. Furthermore, histograms reflecting the fluctuations of the magnetic particle around its steady-state position, at which the counterflows balance precisely the magnetic force, reveal that the measurements are close to thermally limited. The detection of smaller forces is accompanied with a wider potential that enables trapping over a larger phase space than is currently achievable with most point-trap optical-tweezer setups, where the focal spot is typically diffraction-limited. In addition, the optically generated hydrodynamic trap of the invention is highly tuneable, enabling further optimization through increased laser power, elongated scan path length or reduced counterflow update rate.
A further embodiment of a method according to the invention will be described with reference to
More specifically, by scanning the laser beam in the directions of arrows s1 and s2 hydrodynamic flows in the direction of arrows f1 to f4 are generated. The first stagnation point S1 is generated at the position where flows f1 and f4 hit each other.
By scanning the laser beam furthermore in the directions of arrows s3 and s4 hydrodynamic flows in the direction of arrows f5 to f8 are generated. The second stagnation point S2 is generated at the position where flows f5 and f8 meet.
The target to be manipulated and analysed in this example is a tethered molecule comprising two terminal particles p1 and p2 as well as a schematically drawn molecular chain C connecting p1 and p2. Particle p1 is trapped as described above in the vicinity of stagnation point S1. Particle p2 is trapped in the vicinity of stagnation point S2. The forces driving particles p1 and p2 back to the stagnation point S1 and S2, respectively, in a situation where no force is exerted by the molecular chain can be measured as described above. For this purpose, either the flows f1 to f4 generating stagnation point S1 or the flows f5 to f8 generating stagnation point S2 are activated.
The forces F1 and F2 exerted by the molecular chain C on the particles p1 and p2 can then be measured by varying the distance between stagnation point S1 and stagnation point S2 and observing the deviations of particles p1 and p2 from stagnation points S1 and S2, respectively, in dependence of the distance S1-S2.
A specific advantage of the arrangement of
Overall, the inventors disclose a highly sensitive and tuneable contact-free trap generated by two counterdirected optically induced thermoviscous flows. This novel approach can be highly relevant to address the rising concerns regarding the heating effect and possibility of photodamage due to the application of optical trapping in in-vivo systems as well as the geometrical limitations of microfluidic traps. The arbitrarily defined scan paths and resulting stagnation point render this approach highly localized and flexible. The induced levels of heating due to the laser scanning are moderate and would be easily tolerable by in-vivo systems. Thus, the approach of the invention is likely to have a plethora of applications in the life sciences, ranging from cell biology to embryonic development. In the context of materials science, the method is highly suitable for the determination of the viscoelastic properties of complex fluids. Finally, the ability of the counterflow trap to sense femtonewton forces on a micrometre scale may prove particularly advantageous in the field of mechanobiology for the detection of local mechanical cues driving key cellular processes, such as differentiation and proliferation.
With the present disclosure, the inventors present a novel, non-contact trapping method based on optically induced hydrodynamic flows. The inventors demonstrate a linear force-extension relationship that can detect femtonewton-range forces with near thermally limited sensitivity. The presented technology removes the need for lasers to touch particles and there are no material constraints on the particles that can be analysed. Furthermore, the methodology can be employed with standard optical microscopes without a requirement for specialist chambers, making it possible to investigate localized forces within more complex materials. Thus, optically induced hydrodynamic flows facilitate highly sensitive, non-invasive force measurements within a wide range of samples.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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21182612.8 | Jun 2021 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2021/071392 | 7/30/2021 | WO |