Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1884857 Radiation Measurements 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A new microfluidic cytometer for evaluating irradiation dose was developed.•The utility of this biosensor is verified by comparison experiments using FCM.•The developed cytometer is small size, high sensitivity, low cost, and simple.•The cytometer can dramatically reduce sample consumption and analysis time.

Evaluation of radiation dose is very important for the detection of radiation damage. γ-H2AX is a popular biological dosimeter to evaluate the radiation effect. Typically, bulky and expensive commercial flow cytometers are used to detect γ-H2AX. This paper presents a miniaturized and high sensitive cytometer using a microfluidic chip for evaluating the radiation dose by detecting the mean immunofluorescence intensity of γ-H2AX. A compact optical focusing system and a shift-phase differential amplifier are designed to improve the detection sensitivity. Sample lymphocyte cells are stained by FITC fluorescent dye after being irradiated by UVC. Comparison experiments between the developed miniature cytometer and a commercial flow cytometer were conducted under different radiation doses. The developed microfluidic cytometer also demonstrates a good linear correlation between the measured fluorescence intensity and the irradiation dose with a detection limit similar to that of the commercial flow cytometer. The developed cytometer can evaluate quantitatively the radiation dose by the mean fluorescence intensity of γ-H2AX with a significantly smaller amount of blood samples than a commercial flow cytometer.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Radiation
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