The present disclosure relates to label-independent optical readers, and in particular to optical reader systems and methods that do not use a spectrometer.
Label-independent detection (LID) optical readers can be used to detect drug molecule binding to a target molecule such as a protein and to detect the interaction of drug molecules with cells. Certain types of LID optical readers measure changes in refractive index on the surface of an individual resonant waveguide grating (RWG) biosensor, for arrays of RWG biosensors, and for RWG biosensors integrated in the individual wells of a microplate.
In the general operation of a LID optical reader, spectrally broadband light from a broadband optical light source is directed to each RWG biosensor. Only light whose wavelength is resonant with the RWG biosensor is strongly reflected. The reflected light is collected and spectrally analyzed to determine the RWG biosensor resonance wavelength. A measured shift in the resonance wavelength is representative of a refractive index change and thus biochemical/cell/drug interaction occurring at the surface of the RWG biosensor.
Most optical readers use one or more spectrometers to analyze light reflected from the biosensor. This makes such optical reader systems relatively expensive and complex. Further, the resonant wavelength is determined indirectly by processing the spectra obtained from the one or more spectrometers. This typically includes having to use an algorithm, such as a centroid-finding algorithm.
An aspect of the disclosure is a non-spectroscopic optical reader system for reading a RWG biosensor. The system includes a broadband light source that generates broadband light that is incident the RWG biosensor and that reflects therefrom to form biosensor-reflected light having an intensity. A first photodetector receives the biosensor-reflected light and generates a first detector signal representative of the first intensity. An optical edge filter filters either the broadband light or the bio sensor-reflected light. A processor receives the first detector signal and calculates therefrom a resonant wavelength for the RWG biosensor.
Another aspect of the disclosure is a non-spectroscopic optical system for label-independent reading of a RWG biosensor. The system includes a broadband light source that generates broadband light that is incident upon the RWG biosensor and that reflects therefrom. The system also includes an optical edge filter that transmits and reflects respective portions of the reflected light from the RWG biosensor. The system also has first and second photodetectors disposed relative to the optical edge filter to respectively receive the transmitted and reflected light portions and to generate therefrom respective first and second detector signals. The system further includes a processor connected to the first and second photodetectors. The processor receives the first and second detector signals and generates therefrom a signal representative of a resonant wavelength of the RWG biosensor.
Another aspect of the disclosure is a non-spectroscopic method of label-independent reading of a RWG biosensor operably supported by a support structure. The method includes directing broadband light to be incident upon the RWG biosensor and generating reflected light therefrom. The method also includes transmitting the incident broadband light or the reflected light through an optical edge filter. The method further includes detecting the transmitted and filtered portion of the reflected light with a first photodetector and generating a first detector signal representative of a first intensity of the first detected light. The method additionally includes determining a resonant wavelength based on the first detector signal.
These and other advantages of the disclosure will be further understood and appreciated by those skilled in the art by reference to the following written specification, claims and appended drawings.
A more complete understanding of the present disclosure may be had by reference to the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Reference is now to embodiments of the disclosure, exemplary embodiments of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
An example light source unit 106 includes a broadband light source 108, such as super luminous diode (SLD). An example wavelength band Δλ, for broadband light source 108 ranges from about 820 nm to about 840 nm.
Controller/signal processor 120 includes a processor unit (“processor”) 122 operably coupled to a memory unit (“memory”) 124. In an example embodiment, processor 122 is adapted (e.g., is programmed or is programmable) to process information provided to controller/signal processor 120 from photodetector unit 110 or from memory 124. In an example embodiment, controller/signal processor 120 is or includes a programmable computer. The term “processor” includes a general purpose processor, a microcontroller (i.e., an execution unit with memory, etc., integrated within a single integrated circuit), or a digital signal processor. Memory 124 may include any of the common forms of digital memory used in electronic systems and computers. Memory 124 is used, for example, to store data, including resonant wavelength information obtained as described below, and computer-readable instructions (e.g., software) for carrying out signal-processing methods in processor 122.
With reference again to
With reference again to
Controller/signal processor 120 receives from photodetector unit 110 a detector photocurrent signal S1 or detector photocurrent signals S1 and S2 (depending on the number of photodetectors 114 in the photodetector unit), and processor 122 processes these signals according to the methods described below. Controller/signal processor 120 is configured to determine if there are any changes (e.g., 1 part per million) in the RWG biosensor resonance wavelength λR caused by the presence of biological substance and changes thereof. The output of this signal processing is a power-normalized system signal SN for each RWG biosensor 102 representative of a value for the resonant wavelength λR. In an example where normalized system signal is self-normalized (as described below), the system signal is denoted SSN.
In embodiments, one or more RWG biosensors 102 can be supported by a support structure 168 that facilitates reading of one or more RWG biosensors by system 100.
Microplate 170 of
It is noted here that system 100 of the present disclosure is not limited to the use of microplates, and generally can be used with any support structure 168 capable of holding one or more RWG biosensors 102. Other suitable support structures include, for instance, microscope slides, microfluidic structures, micro-arrays, petri dishes, custom single and multiple biosensor support structures, and the like
In the case where multiple RWG biosensors 102 are operably supported (e.g., as an array 102A), then they can be used to enable high-throughput drug or chemical screening studies. For a more detailed discussion about the detection of a biological substance 104 (or a biomolecular binding event) using scanning optical reader systems, reference is made to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/027,547. Other optical reader systems are disclosed in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,424,187 and U.S. Patent Application Publications No. 2006/0205058 and 2007/0202543.
Band-pass filter 147 is used to narrow the bandwidth of broadband light source 108, and can also be located in light source unit 106. Beamsplitter 140 has front and back surfaces 140F and 140B. As incident light 134I enters beamsplitter 140 at front surface 140F and exits at back surface 140B, a small portion of the incident light is reflected to form the aforementioned monitoring light 134IM, as discussed in connection with
In an example embodiment, monitoring photodetector 142 is arranged to receive and detect monitoring light 134IM and transmit a corresponding monitoring signal SM to controller/signal processor 120. As in the example shown in
Polarizer 151 and quarter-wave waveplate 153 are configured to optically isolate photodetectors 114-1 and 114-2 and to mitigate a non-resonant sensor response. A portion of reflected light 135R traveling along system axis A1 is reflected by beamsplitter 140 and travels to edge filter 112, which directs first and second reflected light 134R1 and 134R2 to respective photodetectors 114-1 and 114-2. Photodetectors 114-1 and 114-2 generate respective detector signals S1 and S2, which are received and processed by the controller/signal processor 120 as described below.
With reference to
Photodetectors 114-1 and 114-2 generate respective detectors signals S1 and S2 having respective photocurrents I1 and I2 that are representative of the intensity of light detected. Detector signals S1 and S2 travel to controller 120. Processor 122 receives detector signals S1 and S2 and processes these signals according to the methods described below to generate system signal SSN representative of a value for resonant wavelength λR. In embodiments, information from detector signals S1 and S2 is stored in memory 124 and then provided to processor 122.
The operation of single-detector embodiments of system 100 of
Optical fiber collimator 126 includes a lens 118 to facilitate forming incident light 134I. A third optical fiber section F3 connects the “2×” coupler end 125-2 to optical edge filter 112, which in embodiments can be the same, but appropriately packaged, optical edge filter used in the free-space embodiments of system 100 described in
With reference again to
Optical fiber collimator 126 receives reflected light 134R and converts it to guided light 107R that travels over optical fiber section F2 to the “1 ×” coupler end 125-1. The 1×2 coupler 125 outputs guided light 107R at the “2×” coupler end 125-2 to optical fiber section F3. Guided light 107R travels over optical fiber section F3 to WDM edge filter 112, which transmits a portion 107R1 of guided light 107R to photodetector 114-1 and another portion 107R2 to photodetector 114-2 according to the splitting ratio plot of
As with the free-space embodiment of system 100 of
As described above, system 100 does not rely on using a spectrometer to analyze reflected light 134R to ascertain a value for the resonant wavelength λR. Rather, the two-photodetector system 100 detects the intensity of the reflected light 134R as passed through optical edge filter 112 and converts the detected intensity, as represented by signals S1 and S2 from photodetectors 114-1 and 114-2, into a resonant wavelength λR. The following mathematical analysis describes how signals S1 and S2 are processed to calculate the normalized (or self-normalized) system signal SN (or SSN) representative of resonant wavelength λR.
It is assumed that both the broadband optical source power spectral density PBBS of light source unit 106 and the responsivity of the one or more photodetectors 114 are constant over the spectral region of interest, i.e.,
P
BBS(λ)=PoW/nm (1)
(λ)=
A/W (2)
It is also assumed that the entire system 100 is uniform in the spatial Cartesian coordinate system (x, y, z). Optical edge filter 112 is characterized by a linear change in transmittance over the spectral region of interest, i.e.
where SF is the slope of the filter edge in units of nm−1 and λe is the spectral position of the filter edge. The edge filter shape for SF= 1/10 nm−1 and λe=825 nm is shown in
The reflectance spectrum of RWG biosensor 102 can be characterized by the general function
R(λ,λR)=Ro(λ−λR) (4)
where λR is the resonance wavelength, i.e., the spectral location of the resonance peak and shifts with refractive index changes at the sensor surface. For mathematical simplicity it is assumed that R(λ,λR) is normalized to unity, i.e.
and has units of wavelength (nm). Finally, each photodetector 114 integrates over all incident optical wavelengths to yield the system response when the reflected resonance is located at λR:
Using the above definitions and substituting in the edge filter functional response results in the following expression for the system photocurrent:
This expression is only valid when the resonant wavelength λR is sufficiently far away from the transition regions of the edge filter function relative to the spectral width of the R(λ,λR). The spectral regions where the photocurrent is constant do not contain any useful information and can be ignored. As a result, the above expression for the photocurrent simplifies to
The photocurrent is proportional to the expectation value, or center of mass, centroid, etc., of the biosensor reflectance spectrum. The expectation value of R(λ,λR) is given by the expression
This is precisely what is measured in optical reader systems that use traditional spectroscopic means to measure the resonance wavelength. However, system 100 of the present disclosure generates the same information without ever having to directly spectrally measure and resolve the biosensor reflectance spectrum via spectroscopic means. Further, it avoids the need to implement complex centroid algorithms to determine the resonance wavelength.
Certain conditions are required to ensure that system 100 only measures changes in the resonant wavelength. First, the power Po from light source unit 106 and the detector responsivity must be stable. Typically, at constant temperature the photodiode responsivity is stable. However, the power produced by light source unit 106 may drift with time. As a result, the optical power of light source unit 106 is preferably monitored and used to normalize the measured signal S1.
Systems 100 of
Hence, the power-normalized system signal SN is defined by dividing by αPo ΔBBS, where it is assumed that the responsivity of monitoring photodetector 142 is the same as the measuring photodetector 114, α is the fraction of the source power split off for monitoring purposes by beamsplitter 140, and ΔBBS is the spectral width of the optical source:
This method negates the detrimental effects of power drift in light source unit 106. However, even with this improvement in the overall stability of system 100, the system is still sensitive to perturbations that change the optical power detected by photodetector unit 110. For example, if during operation a defect appears (a smudge, water droplet, fingerprint, a piece of debris, etc.) on the RWG biosensor 102 between readings, the defect will reduce the received optical power and decrease the signal SN(λR), and hence, be interpreted as an erroneous wavelength change. This is illustrated mathematically by including a scale factor γ. The photodetector 114 not only performs a spectral integration as shown in Eq. 6, it also performs a spatial integration. As a result, γ is expressed as:
where TD(x,y) is the spatial “transmission” function of the defect and APD is the area of photodetector 114. With the assumption that a defect impacts all wavelengths equally, the expression for SN(λR) now becomes:
Finally, the impact of the “spectral shape” of both real light source units 106 and real photodetectors 114 are considered. To examine the impact of spectral non-uniformity, Eq. 12 is written to include the wavelength dependent terms in Eq. 6:
If the width of the R(λ,λR) is small compared to the spectral variation of the components in the system then R(λ,λR) can be approximately by the dirac delta function:
R(λ,λR)≈δ(λ−λR) (15)
With this approximation Eq. 13 reduces to
The expression for the “real” signal generated by system 100 is complex and requires the careful control of the system components.
Example systems 100 as discussed above include the use of two photodetectors 114 in photodetector unit 110. The two-photodetector embodiments of system 100 generate detector signals S1 and S2 that can be used to form a self-normalized signal SSN that is proportional to the wavelength shift of the RWG biosensor.
In most cases, optical filters generate both a transmitted signal and reflected signal and are optically lossless such that
T
F(λ)+RF(λ1)=1 (17)
The reflectance of the optical edge filter 112 can be represented by RF(λ)=1−TF(λ):
The photocurrent generated by photodetector 114-2 is given by the expression
where it is assumed that both photodetectors 114-1 and 114-2 have the same responsivity. Again, ignoring the photocurrent generated in the “constant” spectral regions results in the following simplified expression for I2
The photocurrent generated by photodetector 114-1 is the same as the single-photodiode system 100 shown in
Substituting the expressions for I1 and I2 into the expression for SSN and simplifying yields the self-normalized signal produced by the system:
There are two benefits from using the self-normalized signal SSN. First, power fluctuations in light source unit 106 are normalized out of the final signal, and second, the response of system 100 is increased by a factor of two as compared to the response of the single detector case that generates signal SN.
In the case of a non-ideal system the signals I1(λR) and I2(λR) can be rewritten as
Invoking Eq. 15 again yields the simplified expression for the two signals
I
1(λR,γ)=γSFPBBS(λR)(λR)(λR−λe) (25)
I
2(λR,γ)=γPBBS(λR)(λR)−γSFPBBS(λR)
(λR)(λR−λe) (26)
Substituting these expressions into Eq. 21 and simplifying yields the “real” self-normalized signal:
S
SN
Real(λR)=1−2SF(λR−λe) (27)
which is equivalent to Eq. 22 in the delta function limit.
Equation 22 shows that when non-ideal aspects of system 100 are included, such as light source unit power fluctuations, optical fringes due to multi-path interference, defects present on the microplate, the spectral dependence of the photodetector, etc, the final self-normalized signal SSN produced by the system is independent of these perturbations. The result is therefore a robust and accurate measurement of the resonance wavelength without having to spectrally decompose the reflected light 134R from RWG biosensor 102.
In practical situations, the detector signals S1 and S2 are converted to voltages V1 and V2, and in embodiments, processor 122 is configured to: a) determine the first and second voltages V1 and V2 from the respective first and second detector signals S1 and S2; b) determine a difference V2−V1 between the first and second voltages; c) determine a sum V1+V2 of the first and second voltages; and d) divide the voltage difference by the voltage sum, i.e. SSN=(V2−V1)/(V2+V1).
LPF output signals SL1 and SL2 are inputted to difference and sum logic circuitry 330 and 332 to generate the difference and sum signals SD and SS, respectively. The difference and sum signals SD and SS are inputted into division logic circuitry 340 to form the self-normalized output signal SSN of the system by dividing SD by SS.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications to the preferred embodiment of the disclosure as described herein can be made without departing from the scope of the disclosure as defined in the appended claims. Thus, the disclosure covers the modifications and variations provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and the equivalents thereto.
This application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/261,543 filed on Nov. 16, 2009. The content of this application and the entire disclosure of any publication or patent document mentioned herein is incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61261543 | Nov 2009 | US |