Dmitry Strokotov, Maxim Yurkin, Konstantin Gilev, Dirk Van Bockstaele, Alfons Hoekstra, Nikolay Rubtsov, Valerii Maltsev
Journal of Biomedical Optics, Vol. 14, Issue 06, 064036, (November 2009) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3275471
TOPICS: Error analysis, Refractive index, Statistical analysis, Optical spheres, Scattering, Particles, Optimization (mathematics), Light scattering, Blood, Mie scattering
We characterize T- and B-lymphocytes from several donors, determining cell diameter, ratio of nucleus to cell diameter, and refractive index of the nucleus and cytoplasm for each individual cell. We measure light-scattering profiles with a scanning flow cytometer and invert the signals using a coated sphere as an optical model of the cell and by relying on a global optimization technique. The main difference in morphology of T- and B-lymphocytes is found to be the larger mean diameters of the latter. However, the difference is smaller than the natural biological variability of a single cell. We propose nuclear inhomogeneity as a possible reason for the deviation of measured light-scattering profiles from real lymphocytes from those obtained from the coated sphere model.