Title of article :
Discrimination of bladder cancer cells from normal urothelial cells with high specificity and sensitivity: Combined application of atomic force microscopy and modulated Raman spectroscopy
Author/Authors :
Canetta، نويسنده , , Elisabetta and Riches، نويسنده , , Andrew and Borger، نويسنده , , Eva and Herrington، نويسنده , , Simon and Dholakia، نويسنده , , Kishan and Adya، نويسنده , , Ashok K.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
13
From page :
2043
To page :
2055
Abstract :
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) and modulated Raman spectroscopy (MRS) were used to discriminate between living normal human urothelial cells (SV-HUC-1) and bladder tumour cells (MGH-U1) with high specificity and sensitivity. MGH-U1 cells were 1.5-fold smaller, 1.7-fold thicker and 1.4-fold rougher than normal SV-HUC-1 cells. The adhesion energy was 2.6-fold higher in the MGH-U1 cells compared to normal SV-HUC-1 cells, which possibly indicates that bladder tumour cells are more deformable than normal cells. The elastic modulus of MGH-U1 cells was 12-fold lower than SV-HUC-1 cells, suggesting a higher elasticity of the bladder cancer cell membranes. The biochemical fingerprints of cancer cells displayed a higher DNA and lipid content, probably due to an increase in the nuclear to cytoplasm ratio. Normal cells were characterized by higher protein contents. AFM studies revealed a decrease in the lateral dimensions and an increase in thickness of cancer cells compared to normal cells; these studies authenticate the observations from MRS. Nanostructural, nanomechanical and biochemical profiles of bladder cells provide qualitative and quantitative markers to differentiate between normal and cancerous cells at the single cellular level. AFM and MRS allow discrimination between adhesion energy, elasticity and Raman spectra of SV-HUC-1 and MGH-U1 cells with high specificity (83, 98 and 95%) and sensitivity (97, 93 and 98%). Such single-cell-level studies could have a pivotal impact on the development of AFM–Raman combined methodologies for cancer profiling and screening with translational significance.
Keywords :
atomic force microscopy , Modulated Raman spectroscopy , Cytoskeleton organization , bladder cancer , Cell mechanics
Journal title :
Acta Biomaterialia
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Acta Biomaterialia
Record number :
1758037
Link To Document :
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