New biodiagnostics based on optical tweezers: typing red blood cells, and identification of drug resistant bacteria
2013
Measurements of optical tweezers forces on biological micro-objects can be used to develop innovative biodiagnostics
methods. In the first part of this report, we present a new sensitive method to determine A, B, D types of red blood cells.
Target antibodies are coated on glass surfaces. Optical forces needed to pull away RBC from the glass surface increase
when RBC antigens interact with their corresponding antibodies. In this work, measurements of stripping optical forces
are used to distinguish the major RBC types: group O Rh(+), group A Rh(+) and group B Rh(+). The sensitivity of the
method is found to be at least 16-folds higher than the conventional agglutination method. In the second part of this
report, we present an original way to measure in real time the wall thickness of bacteria that is one of the most important
diagnostic parameters of bacteria drug resistance in hospital diagnostics. The optical tweezers force on a shell bacterium
is proportional to its wall thickness. Experimentally, we determine the optical tweezers force applied on each bacteria
family by measuring their escape velocity. Then, the wall thickness of shell bacteria can be obtained after calibrating
with known bacteria parameters. The method has been successfully applied to indentify, from blind tests, Methicillinresistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), including VSSA (NCTC 10442), VISA (Mu 50), and heto-VISA (Mu 3)
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