Zephyrnet Logo

Microscope that detects individual viruses could power rapid diagnostics

Date:

Home > Press > Microscope that detects individual viruses could power rapid diagnostics

PRISM for COVID-19 detection. At top, concept art. Bottom left, a microscope image of a single virus on the photonic crystal surface. Bottom right, a PRISM image with six viruses detected. Image courtesy of Nantao Li
PRISM for COVID-19 detection. At top, concept art. Bottom left, a microscope image of a single virus on the photonic crystal surface. Bottom right, a PRISM image with six viruses detected. Image courtesy of Nantao Li

Abstract:
A fast, low-cost technique to see and count viruses or proteins from a sample in real time, without any chemicals or dyes, could underpin a new class of devices for rapid diagnostics and viral load monitoring, including HIV and the virus that causes COVID-19.

Microscope that detects individual viruses could power rapid diagnostics


Champaign, IL | Posted on March 19th, 2021

Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign described the technique, called Photonic Resonator Interferometric Scattering Microscopy, or PRISM, in the journal Nature Communications.

“We have developed a new form of microscopy that amplifies the interaction between light and biological materials. We can use it for very rapid and sensitive forms of diagnostic testing, and also as a very powerful tool for understanding biological processes at the scale of individual items, like counting individual proteins or recording individual protein interactions,” said study leader Brian Cunningham, the Intel Alumni Endowed Chair of electrical and computer engineering and a member of the Holonyak Micro and Nanotechnology Lab and the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology at Illinois.

In optical microscopes, light bounces off any molecules or viruses it encounters on a slide, creating a signal. Instead of a regular glass slide, the PRISM technique uses photonic crystal: a nanostructured glass surface that brilliantly reflects only one wavelength of light. Cunningham’s group designed and fabricated a photonic crystal that reflects red light, so that the light from a red laser would be amplified.

“The molecules we are looking at – in this study, viruses and small proteins – are extremely small. They cannot scatter enough light to create a signal that can be detected by a conventional optical microscope,” said graduate student Nantao Li, the first author of the paper. “The benefit of using the photonic crystal is that it amplifies the light’s intensity so it’s easier to detect those signals and enables us to study these proteins and viruses without any chemical labels or dyes that might modify their natural state or hinder their activity – we can just use the intrinsic scattering signal as the gauge for determining if those molecules are present.”

The researchers verified their technique by detecting the virus that causes COVID-19. PRISM detected individual coronaviruses as they traveled across the slide’s surface. The researchers also used PRISM to detect individual proteins such as ferritin and fibrinogen. The technique could allow researchers to study such biological targets in their natural states – watching as proteins interact, for example – or researchers could seed the surface of the photonic crystal slide with antibodies or other molecules to capture the targeted items and hold them in place.

“It takes 10 seconds to get a measurement, and in that time we can count the number of viruses captured on the sensor,” Cunningham said. “It’s a single-step detection method that works at room temperature. It is also fast, very sensitive and low cost. It’s very different from the standard way we do viral testing now, which involves breaking open the viruses, extracting their genetic material and putting it through a chemical amplification process so we can detect it. That method, called PCR, is accurate and sensitive, but it requires time, specialized equipment and trained technicians.”

Cunningham’s group is working to incorporate PRISM technology into portable, rapid diagnostic devices for COVID-19 and HIV viral load monitoring. The group is exploring prototype devices that incorporate filters for blood samples and even condensation chambers for breath tests.

“We are also going to use this as a research tool for biology and cancer,” Cunningham said. “We can use it to understand protein interactions that are parts of disease processes. We are interested in using it to detect these tiny vesicles that cancer cells shed, and to see what tissues they come from, for diagnosis, and also to study what cargo they are transporting from the cancer cells.”

The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health supported this work.

####

For more information, please click here

Contacts:
LIZ AHLBERG TOUCHSTONE
BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES EDITOR
217-244-1073

Brian Cunningham
217-265-6291

Copyright © University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

If you have a comment, please Contact us.

Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.

Bookmark:
Delicious Digg Newsvine Google Yahoo Reddit Magnoliacom Furl Facebook

Related Links

The paper “Photonic resonator interferometric scattering microscopy” is available online. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21999-3:

Related News Press

News and information

Building tough 3D nanomaterials with DNA: Columbia Engineers use DNA nanotechnology to create highly resilient synthetic nanoparticle-based materials that can be processed through conventional nanofabrication methods March 19th, 2021

TPU scientists offer new plasmon energy-based method to remove CO2 from atmosphere March 19th, 2021

A new industry standard for batteries: ultra-clean facility for graphene nanotube dispersions March 19th, 2021

Teamwork makes light shine ever brighter: Combined energy sources return a burst of photons from plasmonic gold nanogaps March 18th, 2021

Imaging

Targeting Cancer Detection & Identification of Microorganisms, CEA-Leti Develops Mid-Infrared, Spectral-Imaging Technique: Presentations at Photonics West 2021 Show How Early-Stage Imaging System’s Flexibility Can Be Applied Broadly in Medical Field March 18th, 2021

How photoblueing disturbs microscopy February 26th, 2021

Engineering the boundary between 2D and 3D materials: Cutting-edge microscope helps reveal ways to control the electronic properties of atomically thin materials February 26th, 2021

Govt.-Legislation/Regulation/Funding/Policy

Building tough 3D nanomaterials with DNA: Columbia Engineers use DNA nanotechnology to create highly resilient synthetic nanoparticle-based materials that can be processed through conventional nanofabrication methods March 19th, 2021

Teamwork makes light shine ever brighter: Combined energy sources return a burst of photons from plasmonic gold nanogaps March 18th, 2021

Nanotech scientists create world’s smallest origami bird March 17th, 2021

A COSMIC approach to nanoscale science: Instrument at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source achieves world-leading resolution of nanomaterials March 5th, 2021

Possible Futures

Building tough 3D nanomaterials with DNA: Columbia Engineers use DNA nanotechnology to create highly resilient synthetic nanoparticle-based materials that can be processed through conventional nanofabrication methods March 19th, 2021

TPU scientists offer new plasmon energy-based method to remove CO2 from atmosphere March 19th, 2021

A new industry standard for batteries: ultra-clean facility for graphene nanotube dispersions March 19th, 2021

Teamwork makes light shine ever brighter: Combined energy sources return a burst of photons from plasmonic gold nanogaps March 18th, 2021

Nanomedicine

Targeting Cancer Detection & Identification of Microorganisms, CEA-Leti Develops Mid-Infrared, Spectral-Imaging Technique: Presentations at Photonics West 2021 Show How Early-Stage Imaging System’s Flexibility Can Be Applied Broadly in Medical Field March 18th, 2021

Light-emitting tattoo engineered for the first time: Scientists at UCL and the IIT -Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (Italian Institute of Technology) have created a temporary tattoo with light-emitting technology used in TV and smartphone screens, paving the way for a new type of March 4th, 2021

Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals Files IND to Begin Phase 2b Study of ARO-APOC3 in Patients with Severe Hypertriglyceridemia March 2nd, 2021

Nanoparticles help untangle Alzheimer’s disease amyloid beta plaques: New research shows that the protein that causes Alzheimer’s disease’s hallmark brain plaques clings to certain bowl-shaped nanoparticles, allowing researchers to better understand the disease and potentially pr February 26th, 2021

Discoveries

Building tough 3D nanomaterials with DNA: Columbia Engineers use DNA nanotechnology to create highly resilient synthetic nanoparticle-based materials that can be processed through conventional nanofabrication methods March 19th, 2021

TPU scientists offer new plasmon energy-based method to remove CO2 from atmosphere March 19th, 2021

Targeting Cancer Detection & Identification of Microorganisms, CEA-Leti Develops Mid-Infrared, Spectral-Imaging Technique: Presentations at Photonics West 2021 Show How Early-Stage Imaging System’s Flexibility Can Be Applied Broadly in Medical Field March 18th, 2021

Teamwork makes light shine ever brighter: Combined energy sources return a burst of photons from plasmonic gold nanogaps March 18th, 2021

Announcements

Building tough 3D nanomaterials with DNA: Columbia Engineers use DNA nanotechnology to create highly resilient synthetic nanoparticle-based materials that can be processed through conventional nanofabrication methods March 19th, 2021

TPU scientists offer new plasmon energy-based method to remove CO2 from atmosphere March 19th, 2021

A new industry standard for batteries: ultra-clean facility for graphene nanotube dispersions March 19th, 2021

Teamwork makes light shine ever brighter: Combined energy sources return a burst of photons from plasmonic gold nanogaps March 18th, 2021

Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals/White papers/Posters

Building tough 3D nanomaterials with DNA: Columbia Engineers use DNA nanotechnology to create highly resilient synthetic nanoparticle-based materials that can be processed through conventional nanofabrication methods March 19th, 2021

TPU scientists offer new plasmon energy-based method to remove CO2 from atmosphere March 19th, 2021

Targeting Cancer Detection & Identification of Microorganisms, CEA-Leti Develops Mid-Infrared, Spectral-Imaging Technique: Presentations at Photonics West 2021 Show How Early-Stage Imaging System’s Flexibility Can Be Applied Broadly in Medical Field March 18th, 2021

Teamwork makes light shine ever brighter: Combined energy sources return a burst of photons from plasmonic gold nanogaps March 18th, 2021

Tools

Targeting Cancer Detection & Identification of Microorganisms, CEA-Leti Develops Mid-Infrared, Spectral-Imaging Technique: Presentations at Photonics West 2021 Show How Early-Stage Imaging System’s Flexibility Can Be Applied Broadly in Medical Field March 18th, 2021

From microsaws to nanodrills: laser pulses act as subtle machining tools: Industrial-grade materials processing on the sub-micron scale is enabled by spatially structured ultrashort laser pulses February 26th, 2021

Engineering the boundary between 2D and 3D materials: Cutting-edge microscope helps reveal ways to control the electronic properties of atomically thin materials February 26th, 2021

Novel Flexible Terahertz Camera Can Inspect Objects with Diverse Shapes February 17th, 2021

Photonics/Optics/Lasers

Teamwork makes light shine ever brighter: Combined energy sources return a burst of photons from plasmonic gold nanogaps March 18th, 2021

Compression or strain – the material expands always the same March 10th, 2021

CEA-Leti Envisions Widespread Use of LiDAR Systems Based on Integrated Optical Phased Arrays (OPAs): OPAs with Solid-State Beam Steering Can Reduce the Cost and Size of LiDAR Systems & Improve Performance; Results Reported at Photonics West 2021 March 9th, 2021

Instrument at BESSY II shows how light activates MoS2 layers to become catalysts March 8th, 2021

Coinsmart. Beste Bitcoin-Börse in Europa
Source: http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=56608

spot_img

Latest Intelligence

spot_img