Methods for the detection,
enumeration, and typing of cells are
important in many areas of research and healthcare. In this context,
flow cytometers are a widely used research and clinical tool but are
also an example of a large and expensive instrument that is limited
to specialized laboratories. Smartphones have been shown to have excellent
potential to serve as portable and lower-cost platforms for analyses
that would normally be done in a laboratory. Here, we developed a
prototype smartphone-based flow cytometer (FC). This compact 3D-printed
device incorporated a laser diode and a microfluidic flow cell and
used the built-in camera of a smartphone to track immunofluorescently
labeled cells in suspension and measure their color. This capability
was enabled by high-brightness supra-nanoparticle assemblies of colloidal
semiconductor quantum dots (SiO2@QDs) as well as a support
vector machine (SVM) classification algorithm. The smartphone-based
FC device detected and enumerated target cells against a background
of other cells, simultaneously and selectively counted two different
cell types in a mixture, and used multiple colors of SiO2@QD-antibody conjugates to screen for and identify a particular cell
type. The potential limits of multicolor detection are discussed alongside
ideas for further development. Our results suggest that innovations
in materials and engineering should enable eventual smartphone-based
FC assays for clinical applications