Paper
8 May 2014 Human epithelial cancer cells studied using combined AFM-IR absorption nanoimaging
Eamonn Kennedy, Rasoul Al-Majomaie, Dominic Zerulla, Mohammed Al-Rubeai, James H. Rice
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Abstract
Several recent studies have described the use of infrared (IR) nanoimaging for non-invasive chemical discrimination of subcellular features and intracellular exogenous agents. In this work we outline a number of improvements in both quantitative IR nanoimage analysis and optical system improvements which enable recovery of nanoscale subcellular chemical localization with improved chemical precision. Additionally, we demonstrate how a combination of IR absorption nanoimaging and topographic data can produce subcellular chemical density and complexity maps, which can illustrate several cellular features of interest, including the label free localization of nuclei for both healthy and cancerous cell lines with sub 40nm accuracy. As many cell processes related to disease are governed by the position and dynamics of subcellular features, we present the ability to map biochemical inhomogeneity of cancer cells at nanoscale resolution as a means to explore the subcellular biomechanics underlying carcinogenesis.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Eamonn Kennedy, Rasoul Al-Majomaie, Dominic Zerulla, Mohammed Al-Rubeai, and James H. Rice "Human epithelial cancer cells studied using combined AFM-IR absorption nanoimaging", Proc. SPIE 9129, Biophotonics: Photonic Solutions for Better Health Care IV, 91291M (8 May 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2051652
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KEYWORDS
Absorption

Chemical analysis

Infrared imaging

Nanoimaging

Cancer

Infrared spectroscopy

Atomic force microscopy

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