Microfluidic Imaging Flow Cytometry by Asymmetric-detection Time-stretch Optical Microscopy (ATOM)

被引:3
作者
Tang, Anson H. L. [1 ]
Lai, Queenie T. K. [1 ]
Chung, Bob M. F. [2 ]
Lee, Kelvin C. M. [1 ]
Mok, Aaron T. Y. [1 ]
Yip, G. K. [1 ]
Shum, Anderson H. C. [2 ]
Wong, Kenneth K. Y. [1 ]
Tsia, Kevin K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hong Kong, Dept Elect & Elect Engn, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Hong Kong, Dept Mech Engn, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
来源
JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS | 2017年 / 124期
关键词
Engineering; Issue; 124; Microscopy; imaging flow cytometry; microfluidic; time-stretch imaging; high-throughput screening; single-cell analysis; CIRCULATING TUMOR-CELLS;
D O I
10.3791/55840
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Scaling the number of measurable parameters, which allows for multidimensional data analysis and thus higher-confidence statistical results, has been the main trend in the advanced development of flow cytometry. Notably, adding high-resolution imaging capabilities allows for the complex morphological analysis of cellular/sub-cellular structures. This is not possible with standard flow cytometers. However, it is valuable for advancing our knowledge of cellular functions and can benefit life science research, clinical diagnostics, and environmental monitoring. Incorporating imaging capabilities into flow cytometry compromises the assay throughput, primarily due to the limitations on speed and sensitivity in the camera technologies. To overcome this speed or throughput challenge facing imaging flow cytometry while preserving the image quality, asymmetric-detection time-stretch optical microscopy (ATOM) has been demonstrated to enable high-contrast, single-cell imaging with subcellular resolution, at an imaging throughput as high as 100,000 cells/s. Based on the imaging concept of conventional time-stretch imaging, which relies on all-optical image encoding and retrieval through the use of ultrafast broadband laser pulses, ATOM further advances imaging performance by enhancing the image contrast of unlabeled/unstained cells. This is achieved by accessing the phase-gradient information of the cells, which is spectrally encoded into single-shot broadband pulses. Hence, ATOM is particularly advantageous in high-throughput measurements of single-cell morphology and texture - information indicative of cell types, states, and even functions. Ultimately, this could become a powerful imaging flow cytometry platform for the biophysical phenotyping of cells, complementing the current state-of-the-art biochemical-marker-based cellular assay. This work describes a protocol to establish the key modules of an ATOM system (from optical frontend to data processing and visualization backend), as well as the workflow of imaging flow cytometry based on ATOM, using human cells and micro-algae as the examples.
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页数:9
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