Chapter 3 – Making Light Work in Biology 65
whether the protein is in the folded conformational state. Also, chlorophyll, which is a key
molecule in plants as well as many bacteria essential to the process of photosynthesis (see
Chapter 2), has significant fluorescent properties.
Note also that there is sometimes a problematic issue with in vitro fluorimetry known
as the “inner filter effect.” The primary inner filter effect (PIFE) occurs when the absorption
of a fluorophore toward the front of the cuvette nearest the excitation beam entry point
reduces the intensity of the beam experienced by fluorophores toward the back of the cuvette
and so can result in apparent nonlinear dependence of measured fluorescence with sample
concentration. There is also a secondary inner filter effect (SIFE) that occurs when the fluor
escence intensity decreases due to fluorophore absorption in the emission region. PIFE in
general is a more serious problem than SIFE because of the shorter wavelengths for exci
tation compared to emission. To properly correct these effects requires a controlled titra
tion at different fluorophore concentrations to fully characterize the fluorescence response.
Alternatively, a mathematical model can be approximated to characterize the effect. In prac
tice, many researchers ensure that they operate in a concentration regime that is sufficiently
low to ignore the effect.
3.2.3 FLOW CYTOMETRY AND FLUORESCENCE-ASSISTED CELL SORTING
The detection of scattered light and fluorescence emissions from cell cultures are utilized
in powerful high-throughput techniques of flow cytometry and fluorescence-assisted cell
sorting (FACS). In flow cytometry, a culture of cells is flowed past a detector using con
trolled microfluidics. The diameter of the flow cell close to the detector is ~10−5 m, which
ensures that only single cells flow past the detector at any one time. In principle, a detector
can be designed to measure a variety of different physical parameters of the cells as they flow
past, for example, electrical impedance and optical absorption. However, by far the most
common detection method is based on focused laser excitation of cells in the vicinity of
a sensitive photodetector, which measures the fluorescence emissions of individual cells as
they flow past.
Modern commercial instruments have several different wavelength laser sources and
associated fluorescence detectors. Typically, cells under investigation will be labeled with a
specific fluorescent dye. The fluorescence readout from flow cytometry can therefore be used
as a metric for purity of subsequent cell populations, that is, what proportion of a subsequent
cell culture contains the original labeled cell. A common adaptation of flow cytometry is to
incorporate the capability to sort cells on the basis of their being fluorescently labeled or not,
using FACS. A typical FACS design involves detection of the fluorescence signature with
a photodetector that is positioned at 90° relative to the incident laser beam, while another
photodetector measures the direct transmission of the light, which is a metric for size of
the particle flow past the detector that is thus often used to determine if just a single cell is
flowing past as opposed to, more rarely, two or more in the line with the incident laser beam
(Figure 3.1c).
Cells are usually sorted into two populations of those that have a fluorescence intensity
above a certain threshold, and those that do not. The sorting typically uses rapid electrical
feedback of the fluorescence signal to electrostatics plates; the flow stream is first interrupted
using piezoelectric transducers to generate nanodroplets, which can be deflected by the
electrostatic plates so as to shunt cells into one of two output reservoirs. Other commer
cial FACS devices use direct mechanical sorting of the flow, and some bespoke devices have
implemented methods based on optical tweezers (OTs) (Chapter 6).
FACS results in a very rapid sorting of cells. It is especially useful for generating purity in
a heterogeneous cell population. For example, cells may have been genetically modified to
investigate some aspect of their biology; however, the genetic modifications might not have
been efficiently transferred to 100% of the cells in a culture. By placing a suitable fluorescent
marker on only the cells that have been genetically modified, FACS can then sort these effi
ciently to generate a pure culture output that contains only these cells.