scholarly journals Single-cell pH imaging and detection for pH profiling and label-free rapid identification of cancer-cells

2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Hou ◽  
Yangyang Zhao ◽  
Chuanping Li ◽  
Minmin Wang ◽  
Xiaolong Xu ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santosh Kumar Paidi ◽  
Vaani Shah ◽  
Piyush Raj ◽  
Kristine Glunde ◽  
Rishikesh Pandey ◽  
...  

AbstractIdentification of the metastatic potential represents one of the most important tasks for molecular imaging of cancer. While molecular imaging of metastases has witnessed substantial progress as an area of clinical inquiry, determining precisely what differentiates the metastatic phenotype has proven to be more elusive underscoring the need to marry emerging imaging techniques with tumor biology. In this study, we utilize both the morphological and molecular information provided by 3D optical diffraction tomography and Raman spectroscopy, respectively, to propose a label-free route for optical phenotyping of cancer cells at single-cell resolution. By using an isogenic panel of cell lines derived from MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells that vary in their metastatic potential, we show that 3D refractive index tomograms can capture subtle morphological differences among the parental, circulating tumor cells, and lung metastatic cells. By leveraging the molecular specificity of Raman spectroscopy, we demonstrate that coarse Raman microscopy is capable of rapidly mapping a sufficient number of cells for training a random forest classifier that can accurately predict the metastatic potential of cells at a single-cell level. We also leverage multivariate curve resolution – alternating least squares decomposition of the spectral dataset to demarcate spectra from cytoplasm and nucleus, and test the feasibility of identifying metastatic phenotypes using the spectra only from the cytoplasmic and nuclear regions. Overall, our study provides a rationale for employing coarse Raman mapping to substantially reduce measurement time thereby enabling the acquisition of reasonably large training datasets that hold the key for label-free single-cell analysis and, consequently, for differentiation of indolent from aggressive phenotypes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanjun Zhang ◽  
Yasufumi Takahashi ◽  
Sung Pil Hong ◽  
Fengjie Liu ◽  
Joanna Bednarska ◽  
...  

AbstractDynamic mapping of extracellular pH (pHe) at the single-cell level is critical for understanding the role of H+ in cellular and subcellular processes, with particular importance in cancer. While several pHe sensing techniques have been developed, accessing this information at the single-cell level requires improvement in sensitivity, spatial and temporal resolution. We report on a zwitterionic label-free pH nanoprobe that addresses these long-standing challenges. The probe has a sensitivity > 0.01 units, 2 ms response time, and 50 nm spatial resolution. The platform was integrated into a double-barrel nanoprobe combining pH sensing with feedback-controlled distance dependance via Scanning Ion Conductance Microscopy. This allows for the simultaneous 3D topographical imaging and pHe monitoring of living cancer cells. These classes of nanoprobes were used for real-time high spatiotemporal resolution pHe mapping at the subcellular level and revealed tumour heterogeneity of the peri-cellular environments of melanoma and breast cancer cells.


The Analyst ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 145 (22) ◽  
pp. 7210-7224
Author(s):  
Qingbo Yang ◽  
Alexandre Cristea ◽  
Charles Roberts ◽  
Kun Liu ◽  
Yang Song ◽  
...  

The developed pH nanoprobe unveiled nanomaterial properties that previously unknown (e.g., devastating cytotoxicity) via real-time label-free monitoring on single cells.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Antfolk ◽  
Soo Hyeon Kim ◽  
Saori Koizumi ◽  
Teruo Fujii ◽  
Thomas Laurell

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah E. Pierce ◽  
Jeffrey M. Granja ◽  
William J. Greenleaf

AbstractChromatin accessibility profiling can identify putative regulatory regions genome wide; however, pooled single-cell methods for assessing the effects of regulatory perturbations on accessibility are limited. Here, we report a modified droplet-based single-cell ATAC-seq protocol for perturbing and evaluating dynamic single-cell epigenetic states. This method (Spear-ATAC) enables simultaneous read-out of chromatin accessibility profiles and integrated sgRNA spacer sequences from thousands of individual cells at once. Spear-ATAC profiling of 104,592 cells representing 414 sgRNA knock-down populations reveals the temporal dynamics of epigenetic responses to regulatory perturbations in cancer cells and the associations between transcription factor binding profiles.


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