Continuous quantification of viral plaque dynamics using ultra-large-area label-free imaging enables rapid antiviral susceptibility testing

arXiv:2605.0173822.4
Predicted impact top 78% in APP-PH · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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For virology researchers and clinical diagnostics, this platform transforms the traditional static plaque assay into a rapid, dynamic measurement, potentially accelerating antiviral susceptibility testing.

This paper introduces a label-free, time-resolved plaque reduction assay platform that uses ultra-large-area lens-free imaging and deep learning to continuously quantify viral plaque dynamics. The platform matched ground truth with zero false positives, accelerated readout by ~26 hours, and enabled conclusive drug efficacy evaluations within ~60 hours post-infection.

The plaque reduction assay (PRA) remains the gold standard for antiviral susceptibility testing, evaluating drug potency by measuring reductions in plaque-forming units (PFUs). However, the traditional PRA is time-consuming, labor-intensive, prone to manual counting errors, and offers limited scalability. Moreover, its reliance on destructive fixation and chemical staining reduces the assay to a static, endpoint observation, obscuring the dynamic, time-resolved kinetics of dose-dependent viral inhibition. Here, we introduce a label-free, time-resolved PRA platform that transforms the conventional assay into a continuous, high-dimensional measurement of viral infection dynamics. Our system integrates a compact lens-free imaging setup with a custom-designed ultra-large-area (100 cm^2) thin-film transistor (TFT) image sensor and deep learning-based algorithms to autonomously quantify PFU dynamics within an incubator. Validated using herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1) treated with acyclovir, the platform matched chemically-stained ground truth measurements with zero false positives while accelerating readout by ~26 hours. Crucially, our system revealed that increasing drug concentrations induce temporally distinct delays and suppress new PFU formation, enabling conclusive drug efficacy evaluations within ~60 hours post-infection. This scalable, label-free framework redefines antiviral susceptibility testing as a rapid, time-resolved and information-rich measurement framework, providing a generalizable platform for virology research, high-throughput drug screening, and clinical diagnostics.

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