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Microfluorimetry for the Biosciences

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Ideally measure all chemicals in an organism with spatial and temporal resolution ... Flow Cytometry for Microbiology. Rapid TVC Assay. Rana Alsharif, BD Biosciences ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microfluorimetry for the Biosciences


1
Micro-fluorimetry for the Biosciences
Diether J. Recktenwald PhD Contact email
diether_at_att.net
2

Need of Biology Research
3
Biological measurements
  • Ideally measure all chemicals in an organism with
    spatial and temporal resolution
  • Microscopy
  • high spatial resolution to cell substructures,
    few cells,
  • few parallel chemical measurements with
    subcellular resolution
  • Flow cytometry
  • spatial resolution to one cell, few to many
    cells, several parallel chemical measurements
    with one cell resolution
  • Arrays
  • low spatial resolution to macroscopic cell
    ensemble level, many cells, many parallel
    chemical measurements cell sample resolution

4
Signal Transduction Network
Source DOE, genomes to life program
5

System Components
6
Detection Instrument Considerations
  • Light source (wavelength, power, beam-shape)
  • Excitation optics (direct beams vs. fiberoptics,
    multi-laser)
  • Emission optics (collection efficiency NA,
    immersion optics)
  • Spectral filtering (dispersive elements, filters,
    )
  • Detectors (PMT, CCD, )
  • Signal processing (analog vs. digital, data
    reduction)
  • System background (electronic noise, photon
    statistics, )
  • Fluidics (sheath flow vs undiluted sample, edge
    effects, focal depth)

7
Excitation light sources
  • High luminous density emitters
  • (490nm a desirable wavelength for fluorescein)
  • Arc lamps (Hg-arc, )
  • Gas lasers (Ar, Kr, )
  • Solid state lasers

8
Fluorescence
  • Absorbance
  • Lifetime of excited state
  • Stokes shift
  • Quantum yield
  • Saturation
  • Intrinsic
  • Extrinsic

Source www.olympusmicro.com
9
Fluorescent Dyes
  • Unsaturated organic molecules (photobleaching)
  • Energy-transfer dyes
  • Lanthanide derived pigments
  • Quantum dots
  • Dye combinations for multi-color fluorescence
  • Single vs. multi-laser excitation
  • Spectral overlap

10
Fluorescence Measurements of Chemical Properties
  • Intensity Concentration
  • Lifetime Background reduction
  • FRET (energy transfer) Proximity
  • Polarization Rotational mobility
  • Fluorescence correlation Lateral mobility

11
Quantitative measurements
  • Calibration with
  • soluble fluorophors
  • calibration particles
  • photon statistics

12
Fluorescence Quantitation by Volume Exclusion (1)
13
Fluorescence Quantitation by Volume Exclusion (2)
14
Assay considerations
  • Reagent selection
  • Selection of labels (spectral properties,
    overlap)
  • Homogeneous vs. non-homogeneous
  • Intrinsic fluorescence vs. use of labels
  • Specimen and reagent auto-fluorescence
  • Reference samples

15

Systems, which use fluorescence
16
Fluorescence Microscope
17
Micro-arrays
18
Micro-arrays
19
Micro-arrays
20
Cytometric Bead Array Assays
Quantum Dot Corp
Bead Array assays
21
Flow Cytometers
22
Flow Cytometer Fluidics
Cell Input
Injector Tip
Sheath fluid
Fluorescence
signals
Focused laser
beam
Cells after analysis, available for culture
CD-ROM Vol 3 Purdue University Cytometry
Laboratories
23

Applications in research
24
Applications of Microfluorimetry
  • Measurements
  • specific structures by immunofluorescence or
    in-situ hybridization
  • protein content
  • DNA and RNA with fluorogenic dyes
  • gene expression with fluorescent proteins
  • auto-fluorescencent components
  • enzyme activity with fluorogenic substrates
  • pH and other cations with ion-specific probes
  • redox potential

Hela cells transfected with fluorescent protein
vectors for nuclei, mitochondria and tubulin.
25
Applications of Microfluorimetry
  • Cell sorting
  • Multi-parameter cell subset analysis
  • Organelle visualization
  • Protein translocation
  • Large scale cell composition changes
  • Single fluorescent molecule detection
  • (PCR vs. direct)
  • Nucleic acid fragment sizing
  • Protein-ligand interactions
  • Virus counting

From Huang Z et al. in Cytometry 35 169-175
(1999)
26
Single Molecule Detection
27
Cellular Proteomics From Sample to Result
Transfect with Genes/GFP
Tissue
Blood
Cell Culture
Suspension of Single Cells
Genome Analysis
Purified Single Cells
Cell Disruption
Proteome Analysis
Cell Homogenate
Purified Cell Substructure Fractions
28

Applications in Bio-defense
29
Flow Cytometry for Microbiology Rapid TVC Assay
35 sec
10 sec
25 sec
60 sec
80 sec
90 sec
120 sec
Rana Alsharif, BD Biosciences
30
Rapid Bioagent Identification
Fluorescence based detection and identification
of Bacillus anthracis within 10 minutes after
receiving a sample using widely available
instrumentation
31
Simultaneous Measurements of Multiple Agents
32

Applications in Clinical Diagnostics and
Monitoring
33
Clinical Tests (CD34 counting)
  • Large scale protein analysis in patient serum
    with arrays
  • Cell subset analysis (special hematology)
  • CD4
  • CD34
  • LL
  • Histopathology

34

Therapy
35
Cell Sorting
36
CD34 progenitor cell sorting
  • Isolate human blood progenitor cells for cell
    transplantation
  • CD34 at about 1 in mobilized peripheral blood
  • for high purity several parameters are used
  • 2-5106 CD34 cells needed for treatment
  • analysis rate maximally at 105 cells sec-1
  • sort rate at 2104 cells sec-1
  • several hours of sorting required

37

Outlook
38
Challenges
  • Better use of single molecule sensitivity
  • Absolute quantitation
  • Better multiplexing
  • Efficient use of intrinsic fluorescence

39

END Contact diether_at_att.net Presentation on web
in about a week at http//home.att.net/cellscienc
e Link to site above at http//www.renotahoephoton
ics.com
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