Super-sensitive blood tests likely result of NIST optical tweezer license

Nov. 13, 2008
NOVEMBER 13, 2008 -- Haemonetics (Braintree, MA), a global provider of blood management technologies for hospitals and blood and plasma collection agencies, has licensed from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST, Bethesda, MD) a patented optical tweezers technique. The technique enables detection and measurement of femtomolar concentrations of biological substances -- a single virus on a surface, for instance, or one antigen particle per quadrillion water molecules.

NOVEMBER 13, 2008 -- The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST, Bethesda, MD) has licensed a patented optical tweezer technique for detecting and measuring very small concentrations of a biological substance -- such as a virus on a surface or tiny amounts of pathogens in blood. NIST has issued a non-exclusive license for the technology to Haemonetics (Braintree, MA), a global health care company that provides technology for management of blood samples for hospitals, blood banks, and blood and plasma collection agencies.

Optical tweezers are actually tightly focused laser beams. They can trap certain objects, such as latex microspheres or biological cells, and move them around in water. This occurs because the lasers' electric fields interact with electric charges on the objects.

To detect disease-causing agents, researchers can coat a microsphere with antibody particles and then touch it to a surface containing infectious particles (antigens). The antigens then stick to the antibodies on the sphere, reminiscent of Velcro, in which loops on one strip combine with hooks on the other. By determining how much laser power is required to pull the microsphere away from the surface, one can then calculate the amount of force needed to break off the antibodies from the antigens and thus count the number of individual antigens that were bound to the sphere. This in turn can detect and count biological antigens at extraordinarily low "femtomolar" concentrations—roughly equivalent to one antigen particle per quadrillion (1,000,000,000,000,000) water molecules.

Following up on earlier work in optical tweezers in the industrial and academic research communities in the 1970s, the licensed technology was patented in 1997 (patent #5,620,857), as a result of research conducted under the NIST BioSensor Consortium. The inventors are Howard Weetall (since retired), Kristian Helmerson, and guest researcher Rani Kishore.

More information:
Haemonetics

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