Optical methodology for detecting histologically unapparent nanoscale consequences of genetic alterations in biological cells

被引:111
作者
Subramanian, Hariharan [1 ]
Pradhan, Prabhakar [1 ]
Liu, Yang [1 ]
Capoglu, Ilker R. [1 ]
Li, Xu [1 ,2 ]
Rogers, Jeremy D. [1 ]
Heifetz, Alexander [1 ]
Kunte, Dhananjay [3 ]
Roy, Hemant K. [3 ]
Taflove, Allen [2 ]
Backman, Vadim [1 ]
机构
[1] Northwestern Univ, Dept Biomed Engn, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
[2] Northwestern Univ, Dept Elect Engn & Comp Sci, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
[3] Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, Dept Internal Med, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
light-scattering spectroscopy; nanoarchitecture; subdiffusion;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0804723105
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Recently, there has been a major thrust to understand biological processes at the nanoscale. Optical microscopy has been exceedingly useful in imaging cell microarchitecture. Characterization of cell organization at the nanoscale, however, has been stymied by the lack of practical means of cell analysis at these small scales. To address this need, we developed a microscopic spectroscopy technique, single-cell partial-wave spectroscopy (PWS), which provides insights into the statistical properties of the nanoscale architecture of biological cells beyond what conventional microscopy reveals. Coupled with the mesoscopic light transport theory, PWS quantifies the disorder strength of intracellular architecture. As an illustration of the potential of the technique, in the experiments with cell lines and an animal model of colon carcinogenesis we show that increase in the degree of disorder in cell nanoarchitecture parallels genetic events in the early stages of carcinogenesis in otherwise microscopically/histologically normal-appearing cells. These data indicate that this advance in single-cell optics represented by PWS may have significant biomedical applications.
引用
收藏
页码:20118 / 20123
页数:6
相关论文
共 27 条
  • [1] SCALING THEORY OF LOCALIZATION - ABSENCE OF QUANTUM DIFFUSION IN 2 DIMENSIONS
    ABRAHAMS, E
    ANDERSON, PW
    LICCIARDELLO, DC
    RAMAKRISHNAN, TV
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1979, 42 (10) : 673 - 676
  • [2] CONDUCTIVITY OF QUASI-ONE-DIMENSIONAL METAL SYSTEMS
    ABRIKOSOV, AA
    RYZHKIN, IA
    [J]. ADVANCES IN PHYSICS, 1978, 27 (02) : 147 - 230
  • [3] NEW METHOD FOR A SCALING THEORY OF LOCALIZATION
    ANDERSON, PW
    THOULESS, DJ
    ABRAHAMS, E
    FISHER, DS
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 1980, 22 (08): : 3519 - 3526
  • [4] ABSENCE OF DIFFUSION IN CERTAIN RANDOM LATTICES
    ANDERSON, PW
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW, 1958, 109 (05): : 1492 - 1505
  • [5] REFRACTIVE INDEX OF CONCENTRATED PROTEIN SOLUTIONS
    BARER, R
    TKACZYK, S
    [J]. NATURE, 1954, 173 (4409) : 821 - 822
  • [6] Born M., 1999, PRINCIPLES OPTICS EL
  • [7] Self-assembled patterns of nanospheres with symmetries from submicrons to centimeters
    Chen, K
    Taflove, A
    Kim, YL
    Backman, V
    [J]. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2005, 86 (03) : 1 - 3
  • [8] CORRELATIONS AND FLUCTUATIONS OF COHERENT WAVE TRANSMISSION THROUGH DISORDERED MEDIA
    FENG, SC
    KANE, C
    LEE, PA
    STONE, AD
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1988, 61 (07) : 834 - 837
  • [9] WAVE-PROPAGATION IN ONE-DIMENSIONAL DISORDERED STRUCTURES
    HALEY, SB
    ERDOS, P
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 1992, 45 (15): : 8572 - 8584
  • [10] Diffusive interfacial transport:: A new approach to concentrated protein solution studies
    Kékicheff, P
    Laughlin, RG
    Munyon, RL
    [J]. LANGMUIR, 2001, 17 (16) : 4693 - 4696