| Literature DB >> 35558922 |
Vilhelm Müller1, José M Sousa2, Hatice Ceylan Koydemir3,4,5, Muhammed Veli3,4,5, Derek Tseng3,4,5, Laura Cerqueira2,6, Aydogan Ozcan3,4,5, Nuno F Azevedo6, Fredrik Westerlund1.
Abstract
Diagnostics based on fluorescence imaging of biomolecules is typically performed in well-equipped laboratories and is in general not suitable for remote and resource limited settings. Here we demonstrate the development of a compact, lightweight and cost-effective smartphone-based fluorescence microscope, capable of detecting signals from fluorescently labeled bacteria. By optimizing a peptide nucleic acid (PNA) based fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) assay, we demonstrate the use of the smartphone-based microscope for rapid identification of pathogenic bacteria. We evaluated the use of both a general nucleic acid stain as well as species-specific PNA probes and demonstrated that the mobile platform can detect bacteria with a sensitivity comparable to that of a conventional fluorescence microscope. The PNA-based FISH assay, in combination with the smartphone-based fluorescence microscope, allowed us to qualitatively analyze pathogenic bacteria in contaminated powdered infant formula (PIF) at initial concentrations prior to cultivation as low as 10 CFU per 30 g of PIF. Importantly, the detection can be done directly on the smartphone screen, without the need for additional image analysis. The assay should be straightforward to adapt for bacterial identification also in clinical samples. The cost-effectiveness, field-portability and simplicity of this platform will create various opportunities for its use in resource limited settings and point-of-care offices, opening up a myriad of additional applications based on other fluorescence-based diagnostic assays. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35558922 PMCID: PMC9088845 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra06473c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Selective targeting and imaging of single bacteria on a smartphone. (A) Photographs of a smartphone microscope displaying images of fluorescently labeled Cronobacter spp. bacteria. (B) 3D illustration of the same optomechanical unit that is mounted on the smartphone in (A). (C) Schematic illustration of the bacterial detection procedure. Bacteria from the contaminated sample are fixed on 22 × 50 mm2 glass slides and the bacterial membrane is permeabilized in order for the PNA probe to enter the bacteria. An Alexa Fluor 488 dye is chemically linked to the PNA probe which in turn is designed to bind specifically to certain regions of the ribosomal RNA (rRNA) of the bacteria. After washing away unbound probes, only the targeted bacteria remain fluorescent and can be imaged using the smartphone-based microscope shown in (A).
Fig. 2Evaluation of the dynamic range of the smartphone-based fluorescence microscope using fluorescent beads. (A) Number of fluorescent beads per mm2 on glass coverslips at concentrations ranging from 102 to 108 beads per mL. The green background corresponds to the dynamic range in which the beads can be quantitatively detected using the smartphone-based microscope. The orange background shows the concentration range where the bead concentration is too high for quantitative detection, instead allowing for a qualitative readout. No fluorescent beads were detected in the 102 beads per mL samples. (B) Comparison of the number of detected fluorescent beads per mm2 between the smartphone-based microscope and a conventional benchtop microscope within the dynamic range determined in (A). The black line corresponds to y = x. All experiments were performed in three replicates (N = 3) and all data is shown on a logarithmic scale.
Fig. 3Evaluation of the detection performance of the smartphone-based fluorescence microscope. (A–D) Dilution series, 107 to 104 CFU per mL, of Cronobacter spp. stained with the fluorescent dye SYTO 9. The same region was imaged using the smartphone-based microscope (left) and a conventional microscope (63× oil immersion objective, FITC filter set) (right). The circle in the image captured with the smartphone-based microscope shows the entire field of view of the mobile microscope (i.e. ∼1 mm in diameter), with displayed area in the white square. (B2) Zoom of marked region in (B) for both smartphone and benchtop image.
Fig. 4Evaluation of fluorescence signal from bacteria targeted with the EUB PNA-probe. (A) Part of smartphone image with EUB labeled Cronobacter spp. (B) Corresponding image with a conventional fluorescence microscope (63× oil immersion objective, FITC filter set). (C) Signal to noise (SNR) measurements from smartphone images of Cronobacter spp. stained with SYTO 9 or EUB, as well as non-labeled bacteria used as a negative control (N = 50).
Fig. 5Demonstration of species specificity of the Cronobacter spp. selective PNA-probe CRONO. The bacteria were stained with both the CRONO probe and the general DNA probe DAPI. Images were acquired with a conventional fluorescence microscope using DAPI and FITC filter sets and a 60× oil immersion objective. The slides contain Cronobacter spp. (A and B), Staphylococcus (C and D) and a mix (E and F). (G) and (H) show a zoomed region in (E) and (F) marked with a white square. The arrows are used as reference for different positions of interest in the two corresponding images (left and right).
Fig. 6Cronobacter spp. in powder infant formula samples stained with the species specific Cronobacter spp. PNA-probe CRONO. Smartphone image (A) at different levels of zoom, from entire field of view (A1) down to the scale of a conventional fluorescence microscopy image (A3). The same position on the glass slide was also imaged using a conventional microscope using a 63× oil immersion objective and a FITC filter set (B).