4.6 Article

A compact photonic resonator absorption microscope for point of care digital resolution nucleic acid molecular diagnostics

Journal

BIOMEDICAL OPTICS EXPRESS
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 4637-4650

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group
DOI: 10.1364/BOE.427475

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 EB029805, R01 CA22769901]
  2. Jump ARCHES endowment through the Health Care Engineering Systems Center
  3. Zhejiang University ZJU-UIUC Joint Research Center [DREMES202001]
  4. Ronald H. Filler Scholarship for Cancer Scholars
  5. Illinois Scholars in Undergraduate Research (ISUR) Scholarship

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This study presents a portable photonic resonator absorption microscope utilizing resonant optical coupling between gold nanoparticles and a photonic crystal surface. By using specific miRNA sequences and nucleic acid toehold probes with gold nanoparticles, a detection limit of 160 aM was achieved in an AC + DC assay.
Rapid, sensitive, and selective detection of nucleic acid biomarkers for health diagnostic applications becomes feasible for point of care scenarios when the detection instrument is inexpensive, simple, and robust. Here, we report the design, implementation, and characterization of a point of care instrument for photonic resonator absorption microscopy (PRAM) that takes advantage of resonant optical coupling between plasmonic gold nanoparticle tags and a photonic crystal (PC) surface. Matching the PC resonant wavelength to the gold nanoparticle's surface plasmon wavelength generates localized and efficient quenching of the PC resonant reflection intensity, resulting in the ability to clearly detect and count individual gold nanoparticles when they are captured on the PC surface. Surface-captured nanoparticles are observed by illuminating the PC at normal incidence with polarized light from a low-intensity red LED, and recording of PC reflected intensity on an inexpensive CMOS image sensor. A contrast limited adaptive histogram equalization (CLAHE) image processing algorithm was applied to derive counts of captured nanoparticles. The instrument is utilized in the context of an activate capture + digital counting (AC + DC) assay for a specific miRNA sequence, using nucleic acid toehold probes applied to gold nano-urchin (AuNU) nanoparticles to achieve 160 aM detection limits in a 30 min. assay. (C) 2021 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

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