Depth-multiplexed ptychographic microscopy for high-throughput imaging of stacked bio-specimens on a chip
Imaging a large number of bio-specimens at high speed is essential for many biomedical applications. The common strategy is to place specimens at different lateral positions and image them sequentially. Here we report a new on-chip imaging strategy, termed depth-multiplexed ptychographic microscopy...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biosensors & bioelectronics 2023-03, Vol.224, p.115049-115049, Article 115049 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Imaging a large number of bio-specimens at high speed is essential for many biomedical applications. The common strategy is to place specimens at different lateral positions and image them sequentially. Here we report a new on-chip imaging strategy, termed depth-multiplexed ptychographic microscopy (DPM), for parallel imaging and sensing at high speed. Different from the common strategy, DPM stacks multiple specimens in the axial direction and images the entire z-stack all at once. In our prototype platform, we modify a low-cost car mirror for programmable steering of the incident laser beam. A blood-coated image sensor is then placed underneath the stacked sample for acquiring the resulting diffraction patterns. With the captured images, we perform blind recovery of the incident beam angle and model different layers of the stacked sample as different coded surfaces for object reconstruction. For in vitro experiment, we demonstrate time-lapse cell culture monitoring by imaging 3 stacked microfluidic channels on the coded sensor. For high-throughput cytometric analysis, we image 5 stacked brain sections with a 205-mm2 field of view in ∼50 s. Cytometric analysis is also performed to quantify the cellular proliferation biomarkers on the slides. The DPM approach adds a new degree of freedom for data multiplexing in microscopy, enabling parallel imaging of multiple specimens using a single detector. The demonstrated 6-mm depth of field is among the longest ones in microscopy imaging. The novel depth-multiplexed configuration also complements the miniaturization provided by microfluidics devices, offering a solution for on-chip sensing and imaging with efficient sample handling.
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•Depth-multiplexed strategy for imaging multiple stacked specimens all at once.•Programmable beam steering using a car mirror and blind recovery of the incident angle.•High-resolution, large field-of-view on-chip microscopy with a 6-mm ultralong imaging depth.•Simultaneous imaging of 3 stacked microfluidic channels for on-chip monitoring of live cell cultures.•Simultaneous imaging of 5 stacked brain sections for cytometric analysis on a chip. |
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ISSN: | 0956-5663 1873-4235 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bios.2022.115049 |