Team:TU-Delft/Zephyr

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Zephyr: DIY low-cost fluorescence scanner

Zephyr is a low-cost Do It Yourself (DIY) machine which can scan petridishes and 96 well plates for expression of fluorescence at micrometer scale. The Typhoon is the commercial machine that does the same, only it is priced around 120.000 dollars. The main difference is the use of low-cost optics. This allows you to pick exactly which fluorescence you want to detect and not to pay for the ones you do not use. Furthermore, it does not have confocal optics, as this is not that often when scanning bacteria and protein gels. This DIY machine can be built by anyone with one or two days on their hands and the costs are around 1500 dollars.

The machine is built from a plastic frame, machined by laser-cutting. This is a widely available technique and can be done by many companies. The resulting parts can be assembled like a puzzle, clicking the parts together, making it accessible. The petridishes/gels/plates are moved on a 2D table under an optical tube resembling a fluorescent microscope. By taking images one after another and combining them with the supplied stitching software a high resolution image of the entire object is obtained.

Why? Reason d’être

Research is not cheap in general and synthetic biology is no exception. Much of the lab equipment has a price running of ten thousand dollars. For some teams this is no hurdle, their lab has all the equipment they possibly may need, while other teams may struggle with their characterization because of lack of needed equipment.This may be an explanation why in the iGEM competition certain regions/continents (e.g. Africa and Latin America) have few teams and little very little growth. [1][2] In our view, being able to participate in the iGEM competition should be accessible to everyone. For most of the mentioned equipment, only the high tech versions are available, which make it so costly. However the simple versions of these machines would be enough in most cases. As an analog: there are only high tech Bentleys available and no Ford Fiestas, while these Fiestas would be enough for simple transportation.

Therefore we decided to build a low-cost Typhoon, which would be easy to make on your own. This machine is of course not as high-tech as the Typhoon, but it measures at the same scale and has roughly the same performance.

What? Working principle

Overview of the working principle
Probably 3 figures will be used here:

  • Showing the components -> A,B,C and x,y direction using set-up.
  • Explanation of the movement -> step-wise.
  • Schematic overview of the optical tube.
  • How? The Zephyr DIY guide

    How to make the Zephyr can be broken down in different modules: first the buying of materials and parts, then the making of several parts, assembling them, wiring the electronic circuit, programming the microprocessor, controlling the set-up from the pc and calibrating the image stitching to make a complete image.

    Part list

    In Table 1 the parts are listed into three categories: optical-, electrical- and mechanical components with a possible online store to buy the components. The plastic PMMA sheets are difficult to acquire online, it usually works the best to contact a local plastic supplier. Most of the mechanical parts can be swapped out for ones with the same dimensions, e.g. the bearings.

    Note that in this list only dichroic parts for GFP are listed, for other wavelengths other parts are necessary. The dichroic parts are the excitation- and emission filter and the dichroic mirror itself. For many fluorescent proteins Edmund Optics has listed a good choice for these. If your fluorescent protein is not on there, the following guidelines may help you: Find out the emission frequency of your protein, pick the frequency of the 25 mm emission filter as close as possible. Pick the dichroic 25.2 x 35.6mm mirror 20 nm lower than this frequency and the 25 mm excitation filter 40 nm lower than the emission filter.

    In addition to these filters and the mirror, you will also need a high power LED. The emission frequency of this LED should be very close to the frequency of the emission filter. Many of these LEDs are available on superbrightleds.com.


    Mechanical parts   
    PMMA clear 6mm thick, 870 mm x 540 mmThe plastic for the frame1-
    PMMA clear 6mm thick, 515 mm x 290 mmThe plastic for the frame1-
    PMMA clear 3mm thick, 300 mm x 150 mm The plastic for the frame1-
    Linear bearring 15 mm 8 mm 24 mmBearrings allowing sliding8 link 1
    Pouley 30 tooths, 6 mm diameter holePouley to move the belt8 link 2
    Belt 950 mm, 380 toothsDrive belt4 link 3
    Axis 8MM diameter 312 mm lengthC194 link 4
    Axis 8MM diameter 335 mm lengthC202 link 5
    Bearring inside diameter 6 mm outer diameter 19 mm Bearrings to hold pouleys4 link 6
    Fixation rings 8 mmTo fixate the axis12 link 7
    SM1V10 - Ø1" SM1 Lens Tube, 1" Long External ThreadsLens tube allowing focussing1 link 8
    CP4S - SM1-Threaded 30 mm Cage Plate, 4 mm ThickPlate mounting for the lens1 link 9
    SM1A3 - Adapter with External SM1 Threads and Internal RMS ThreadsAdapter between different threads 1 link 10
    M6 bolts x 40 mm +nuts4 to support the pouleys and 4 for the holding of the objectie plate8-
    M3 bolts x 20 mm + nutsTo tightent belts to sliders8-
    Black painte.g. exhaust paint1-
    Heat transfer double sided tapeTo fixate the high power LED1 link 11
    M3 bolts x 15 mmTo mount motors16
    1-
    1
    GlueTo fixate webcam-

    Table 1: The parts to buy of the Zephyr, including dichroic parts for GFP detection.

    Making of the parts

    In total 41 unique parts must be made out of plastic using laser cutting. These parts are dived into four categories: A to D. A are the parts of the dichroic holder including the LED holder. B are the parts of the optical holder, C are the frame parts and D are the parts that hold petridishes and the 96 well plates. In the table below the parts are listed with their name and their coding (e.g. B3).


    Table 2: The parts to make for the Zephyr.

    For all these parts technical drawings are available below or bundled in this pdf. Note that these are the dimensions that result from using the laser cutting method.


    Figure 1: The Individual technical drawings of the parts to make

    So, how to make these parts? For laser cutting the parts to make must usually be supplied a ‘dxf’-format, this is a file containing the 2D structure of the different parts. For all the different parts these files can be found in this zip-file. These digital files can be directly sent to a company that can make them for you or a technician at a university. The three plastic plates will suffice to make all the parts according to the quantity. You will have to ask them to combine them in a smart way for you on the plate. This would look something in Figure 2.

    Figure 2: Example of the collection of the different parts in the laser program


    Figure 3: Example of the collection of the different parts in the laser program

    After these parts are cut, all the A and B parts must be painted. Paint both of the sides like in Figure 4, this will prevent reflection of light inside the optical tube and interference of outside light.


    Figure 4: Example of painting the A-parts.

    Assembly of the parts


    Assembly of A
    Assembly of A
    id1
    Assembly of B
    id2
    Preparation of webcam and LED








































    Wiring the circuits

    Arduino code, microprocessor

    The Arduino controls both the LED, all the motors and communicates with the PC. Attached is the Arduino code file [link_to_arduino_file], which can be uploaded to the Arduino using the supplied software link.

    Control software

    Image processing

    Explanation of the design

    Desired specifications

    Specific justifications

    Results

    Sensitivity and linearity

    Petridish reading

    Conclusions

    Design in general

    Resulting specifications

    Discussion / Future aspirations