posted on 2016-01-19, 00:00authored byXianlin Zheng, Yiqing Lu, Jiangbo Zhao, Yuhai Zhang, Wei Ren, Deming Liu, Jie Lu, James A. Piper, Robert
C. Leif, Xiaogang Liu, Dayong Jin
Compared with routine microscopy
imaging of a few analytes at a
time, rapid scanning through the whole sample area of a microscope
slide to locate every single target object offers many advantages
in terms of simplicity, speed, throughput, and potential for robust
quantitative analysis. Existing techniques that accommodate solid-phase
samples incorporating individual micrometer-sized targets generally
rely on digital microscopy and image analysis, with intrinsically
low throughput and reliability. Here, we report an advanced on-the-fly
stage scanning method to achieve high-precision target location across
the whole slide. By integrating X- and Y-axis linear encoders to a motorized stage as the virtual “grids”
that provide real-time positional references, we demonstrate an orthogonal
scanning automated microscopy (OSAM) technique which can search a
coverslip area of 50 × 24 mm2 in just 5.3 min and
locate individual 15 μm lanthanide luminescent microspheres
with standard deviations of 1.38 and 1.75 μm in X and Y directions. Alongside implementation of an
autofocus unit that compensates the tilt of a slide in the Z-axis in real time, we increase the luminescence detection
efficiency by 35% with an improved coefficient of variation. We demonstrate
the capability of advanced OSAM for robust quantification of luminescence
intensities and lifetimes for a variety of micrometer-scale luminescent
targets, specifically single down-shifting and upconversion microspheres,
crystalline microplates, and color-barcoded microrods, as well as
quantitative suspension array assays of biotinylated-DNA functionalized
upconversion nanoparticles.