1. Field of the Invention
This invention lies in the field of methods and devices for the imaging of arrays of biological samples.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Fluorescent labels are widely used in biological and biochemical studies and analyses, and particularly in two-dimensional imaging of analytical media. Quantum dots, fluorescent dyes, and proteins or other biological species that fluoresce intrinsically have all been used as fluorescent labels. Media in which these labels have been used include rectangular arrays of discrete points on slides, chips, and microliter-sized samples in microplates, as well as continuous media such as tissue samples, colony counting plates, and slab-shaped electrophoresis gels. Detection and imaging with fluorescent labels in any of these media is achieved by illumination of the medium at an excitation wavelength appropriate to the label and detection of the emissions from the label that result from the excitation. To obtain accurate results, the illumination be uniform across the full length and width of the medium so that the points at each set of coordinates in the medium will receive the same illumination regardless of their locations. It is also important that the emissions be properly correlated with their points of origination and readily distinguishable from radiation or emissions not originating from the labels, and that the emission signals be quantifiable and, in many cases, recordable.
The present invention resides in a transillumination system for fluorescence detection of a two-dimensional field with substantially uniform illumination across the length and width of the field. The invention achieves this by use of a slab of optically transparent material with a planar surface to support the labeled sample(s) and a wedge-shaped profile, illuminated by a light source trained on the edge of the slab at the thick end of the wedge. The transmission of light energy from the illuminated edge to the planar surface is achieved by reflection, refraction, or other light-redirecting means at the sloping lower surface of the slab. Optional additional features, such as localized reflective or refractive features on the lower surface of the slab or the use of a light source of non-uniform intensity along the length of the illuminated edge, contribute to the control of the distribution of light reaching the upper surface. Further optional features of the invention include one or more optical filters or equivalent elements integrated with the slab to limit the entering light to a selected excitation wavelength or wavelength range. The planar upper surface of the slab allows it to serve as a platen, or generally a support, for a two-dimensional sample or sample array, and the slab is preferably designed for insertion in an imaging instrument, particularly one that has only limited clearance below the array. In preferred embodiments, the slab is incorporated in a tray that includes the light source and any lenses, optical filters, and other components for light transmission and distribution in addition to electrical contacts for connection to a power source in the imaging instrument. The term “slab” is used here for convenience; it will be recognized from the description that follows that the component to which the term is applied is one that is highly engineered and used in a precision instrument.
These and other features of the invention and the means by which they are achieved are described below.
a is a side view of a slab in accordance with the present invention.
a is a cross section of a second slab in accordance with the present invention.
The upper surface of a slab of the present invention is generally planar to allow the slab to serve as a sample support, and the lower surface of the slab is in most cases planar as well or has planar sections. A preferred slab geometry is one that is rectangular in shape and, in terms of thickness, a wedge, a truncated wedge, or a series of contiguous truncated wedges. In a wedge-shaped slab or a slab with wedge-shaped sections, the light source is trained on or optically coupled to the thick edge of each wedge. The term “optically coupled” is used herein to denote that all light emerging from one part, in this case the light source, is received by the other part, in this case, the thick edge of the wedge. The angle of the wedge is small enough that the surfaces, if perfectly smooth, would produce total internal reflection of most, and preferably all, of the entering light. The wedge can therefore be a few percent wedge, such as a 1% to 10%, and preferably a 2% to 8% wedge. (The expression “% wedge” is used herein for its conventional meaning, i.e., the distance of vertical rise over a given horizontal distance, divided by the horizontal distance, multiplied by 100.) The thick end of the wedge in preferred embodiments is about 4 mm to about 8 mm in thickness. The slab can be formed of a single wedge, or of two or more wedges each with their thick edges at the periphery of the slab facing outward and their narrow ends facing each other and joined. A rectangular slab can thus be formed of two to four wedges. With multiple wedges, each wedge will have an independent light source at its thick outer edge, and its own lens, filter, and other light distribution features, and each wedge will independently extract light along its length and width from the light entering at the edge and redirect the extracted light to the upper surface.
Surface features can be incorporated along the lower surface of the slab to assist in the extraction of light from the slab and the redirection of the light to the upper surface by means other than simple internal reflection. The surface features used in wedge-shaped light guides of the prior art, such as for example those used as back lights for liquid crystal displays (LCDs), can be used for this purpose. The distribution of these surface features in combination with the taper of the wedge can be selected to produce a substantially constant amount of light emerging from the upper surface of the slab per unit area of the upper surface. These surface features can be topographical features on the lower surface of the slab that are either reflective or diffractive. These topographical features can be a texture applied to the lower surface or digitally designed microstructured patterns including those with a holographic morphology. Examples of topographical features are spherical and elliptical indentations, and they can form either a regular or irregular array. Further examples of topographical features are frosting, microwedges, microprisms, and lines (either troughs or ridges) with light-redirecting profiles. The light-directing profiles can be round or those of microprisms. All such features are known in the art of light guides for LCDs. Topographical features can be formed by molding, machining, bead blasting, acid etching, or other chemical or mechanical means.
In addition to improving the transmission of light from the light source to the upper surface of the slab, the topographical features can be designed to compensate for inherent nonuniformities in light transmission through the slab. Longitudinal nonuniformities for example can arise from decreases in intensity due to absorption within the slab itself, since light rays traveling greater distances to reach the far end of the slab (opposite the light source) will suffer greater absorption before striking the lower surface than light rays that strike the lower surface closer to the light source. Likewise, nonuniformities in the lateral direction can arise from the escape of light energy through lateral, nonilluminated edges. Compensation for any of these nonuniformities can be achieved by using topographical features of varying size, height, spacing, and density along the direction of the nonuniformity. Topographical features that increase the extraction of light can be used at points of otherwise decreasing intensity and those that increase the absorption can be used at points of relatively high intensity. Similar variations can be achieved by the inclusion of localized absorptive or reflective areas, such as dots or grids, on the lower surface. Dots and grids can be applied in any conventional manner, such as painting or printing, and their sizes and densities can be varied in the same manner as the topographical features and toward the same purpose. An alternative to the topographical features, dots, and grids is a reflective or refractive film optically cemented to the lower surface of the slab. An example of such a film is one sold under the name VIKUITI™ TRAF2 (3M, St. Paul, Minn., USA).
The slab is made from a transparent material but preferably one of substantially no autofluorescence, i.e., low autofluorescence or no autofluorescence. The “substantially no autofluorescence” is used herein to denote that any autofluorescence is low enough to have no effect on an imager's ability to measure fluorescence intensities of the species to be detected relative to themselves and to other species in the sample. Materials known to be autofluorescing, such resinous (plastic) materials, are thus not favored. Various forms of glass, notably borosilicate float glasses, are preferred. One example is BOROFLOAT® 33 (Schott North America, Inc., Duryea, Pa., USA). Other suitable materials include fused silica and sapphire.
The light source can be any source that will illuminate an edge of the slab. When the slab is in the form of joined wedge sections, the sections will be arranged such that the thick edge of each wedge is at the outer edge of the slab, and a separate light source will illuminate each wedge at its thick end. Thus, when the slab is formed from two wedges meeting at their thin edges, a separate light source will illuminate each wedge, directing light toward the meeting line. A three-wedge slab will utilize three light sources, a four-wedge slab four light sources, etc. The wavelength range of the light source(s) can be selected to meet the needs of the fluorescent labels. Preferred light sources are those emitting in the ultraviolet, visible, or near-infrared ranges. A lens is included in preferred embodiments of the invention to collect, collimate, and direct the light from each light source into the slab, including light that might otherwise bypass the slab. While conventional light bulbs can be used as the light source, long bulbs and linelights are preferred when uniform intensities are sought along the length of the illuminated edge. Bulbs with reflectors to redirect light can also be used. Light emitting diodes (LEDs) can also be used, including those incorporating reflectors operating by total internal reflection, as can lasers. Arrays of LEDs or lasers can be used, as can a closely spaced array of bulbs or an LED linelight such as that available from StockerYale, Inc. (Salem, N.H., USA). An LED linelight is a continuous line of LED dies mounted directly on a printed circuit board with attendant optics including an aperture mask and a cylindrical lens.
A light source designed to compensate for losses of light at the lateral edges of the wedge can also be used, particularly for single-wedge or double-wedge slabs in which the lateral edges are exposed. Rows of individual, discretely spaced LEDs or lasers with closer spacing toward the ends of the rows can thus be used to achieve a higher intensity of supplied light at the ends.
When discrete, spaced LEDs or lasers are used, a lens that is either round or cylindrical and either spheric or aspheric can be used with each LED or laser. Such lenses are available from JML Optical industries Inc. and CVI Melles Griot (both of Rochester, N.Y., USA). A particularly preferred lens for its minimal space requirement is a Fresnel lens (Fresnel Optics, Rochester, N.Y., USA) in either a spherical or cylindrical format.
Where an optical filter is used, the filter is the last component that the light passes through before entering the slab. A preferred optical filter is a coated optical interference bandpass filter that transmits 70-95% of the light in a narrow wavelength range and blocks the light outside that range to the ppm level, preferably to optical density (OD) 6. Such a filter will prevent background light, including light leaking from the light source, from reaching the detector in the instrument in which the slab is inserted. The filter can be a long rectangular strip filter or a collection of small filters assembled into a long filter. For individual LEDs or lasers, small, round filters can also be used. When a Fresnel lens is included in the system, a filter will be useful in eliminating any autofluorescence produced by the Fresnel lens.
The brightness of the light emerging from the slab can be increased, and in many cases approximately doubled, by optically coupling a brightness enhancement filter (BEF) to the upper surface of the slab. Optical coupling is readily achieved with an optical cement or other conventional means. A BEF is a thin film that contains molded microprism features that use total internal reflection at high angles to retroreflect high-angle light rays back to the interior of the slab. Once in the slab, the reflected light continues to reflect off the microprisms until it approaches the microprisms at an angle of incidence that permits the light to emerge. This results in a smaller emission angle of the light relative to the direction normal to the bulk slab surface. When a BEF of molded plastic is used, autofluorescence can be minimized by using a very thin BEF. Alternatively, a BEF of microsheet glass can be used. An example of a BEF currently available is one sold under the product name VIKUITI™ BEF III (3M, St. Paul, Minn., USA).
The uniformity of the light emerging from the slab can be further enhanced by the placement of a diffuser at the upper surface of the slab. As in conventional diffusers used for general lighting, the diffuser can have a roughened, stippled, or frosted surface to diffuse light emerging from the slab before the light reaches the sample array. Any side of the slab can have a white or diffusive reflecting surface to improve uniformity.
The slab, light source(s), and lens(es), and filter(s) when included can be integrated into a tray that slides into an imager or other gel documentation system. Examples of imaging systems are the Bio-Rad Molecular Imager® Gel Doc™ XR System and Bio-Rad Molecular Imager® ChemiDoc™ XRS System, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., Hercules, Calif., USA. The tray can contain electrical connections for coupling with a power source in the imager upon insertion of the tray. Alternatively, the tray can contain a battery pack as an integrated power supply.
As mentioned above, the illumination device of this invention can be used for imaging of biological samples in two-dimensional arrays as well as tissue sections, colony counting plates, and other two-dimensional samples. The device can also be used as an illuminator for performing calibrated densitometry on biological samples, such as nucleic acid gels stained with Coomassie Blue, using white light sources such as white LEDs or visible white light bulbs. The calibration itself can be performed with standard step-density tablet targets. Such targets are available, for example, from The Tiffen Company, Hauppage, N.Y., USA.
One example of a slab in accordance with this invention is shown in
The slab of
a and 2b illustrate a slab 31 in the form of four wedges rather than one as in
An exploded view of the various layers of a slab according to certain embodiments of the invention is shown in
Topographical features 41 on the lower surface of the slab 31 are illustrated in the side view of
Lateral nonuniformity in the light emerging from the slab is illustrated in
In the claims appended hereto, the terms “a” and “an” are each intended to mean “one or more.” The term “comprise” and variations thereof such as “comprises” and “comprising,” when preceding the recitation of a step or an element, are intended to mean that the addition of further steps or elements is optional and not excluded. All patents, patent applications, and other published reference materials cited in this specification are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. Any discrepancy between any reference material cited herein or any prior art in general and an explicit teaching of this specification is intended to be resolved in favor of the teaching in this specification. This includes any discrepancy between an art-understood definition of a word or phrase and a definition explicitly provided in this specification of the same word or phrase.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/145,792, filed Jan. 20, 2009, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61145792 | Jan 2009 | US |