4.6 Article

Motility-, autocorrelation-, and polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography discriminates cells and gold nanorods within 3D tissue cultures

Journal

OPTICS LETTERS
Volume 38, Issue 15, Pages 2923-2926

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OL.38.002923

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Funding

  1. NIH [R21HL111968]
  2. Carolina Cancer Center of Nanotechnology Excellence (C-CCNE) [U54CA119343, R01CA138255]
  3. Breast Cancer and the Environment Research Program (BCERP) [U01ES019472]
  4. NSF [DMR-1056653]
  5. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  6. Division Of Materials Research [1056653] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We propose a method for differentiating classes of light scatterers based upon their temporal and polarization properties computed from time series of polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography (PS-OCT) images. The amplitude (motility) and time scale (autocorrelation decay time) of the speckle fluctuations are combined with the cross-polarization pixel-wise to render Motility-, autocorrelation-, and polarization-sensitive (MAPS) OCT contrast images. This combination of metrics provides high specificity for discriminating diffusive gold nanorods and mammary epithelial cell spheroids within 3D tissue culture, based on their unique MAPS signature. This has implications toward highly specific contrast in molecular (nanoparticle-based) and functional (cellular activity) imaging using standard PS-OCT hardware. (C) 2013 Optical Society of America

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