Evidence for localized cell heating induced by infrared optical tweezers

Abstract

The confinement of liposomes and Chinese hamster ovary cells by infrared optical tweezers is shown to result in sample heating and temperature increases by several degrees centigrade, as measured by a noninvasive, spatially resolved fluorescence detection technique. For micron- sized spherical liposome vesicles having bilayer membranes composed of the phospholipid 1,2-diacyl-pentadecanoyl-glycero-phosphocholine, a temperature rise of ~1.45 ± 0.15°C/100 mW is observed when the vesicles are held stationary with a 1.064 μm optical tweezers having a power density of ~10 7 W/cm 2 and a focused spot size of ~0.8 μm. The increase in sample temperature is found to scale linearly with applied optical power in the 40 to 250 mW range. Under the same trapping conditions, CHO cells exhibit an average temperature rise of nearly 1.15 ± 0.25°C/100 mW. The extent of cell heating induced by infrared tweezers confinement can be described by a heat conduction model that accounts for the absorption of infrared laser radiation in the aqueous cell core and membrane regions, respectively. The observed results are relevant to the assessment of the noninvasive nature of infrared trapping beams in micromanipulation applications and cell physiological studies.

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Yi Liu
Wuhan University
Ying Liu
University of Glasgow

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