4.8 Article

Phasor Analysis of Fluorescence Lifetime Enables Quantitative Multiplexed Molecular Imaging of Three Probes

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 94, Issue 41, Pages 14185-14194

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02149

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Cancer Institute (NCI) [R21CA206953, P30CA062203]
  2. American Cancer Society [129801-IRG-16-187-13-IRG]
  3. University of California, Irvine's Medical Scientist Training Program of the National Institutes of Health [T32GM008620]

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Fluorescence lifetime-based multiplexing allows simultaneous detection of multiple probes, and the phasor approach provides a simple solution for lifetime analysis. This study demonstrates the ability of phasor analysis to resolve and quantify exogenous fluorescent probes based on lifetime information alone. It also shows that lifetime-based quantitation accuracy can be improved through intensity matching. The results highlight the potential of fluorescence lifetime imaging and phasor analysis as a powerful tool for simultaneous detection of multiple biomarkers.
The excited-state lifetime is an intrinsic property of fluorescent molecules that can be leveraged for multiplexed imaging. An advantage of fluorescence lifetime-based multiplexing is that signals from multiple probes can be gathered simultaneously, whereas traditional spectral fluorescence imaging typically requires multiple images at different excitation and emission wavelengths. Additionally, lifetime and spectra could both be utilized to expand the multiplexing capacity of fluorescence. However, resolving exogenous molecular probes based exclusively on the fluorescence lifetime has been limited by technical challenges in analyzing lifetime data. The phasor approach to lifetime analysis offers a simple, graphical solution that has increasingly been used to assess endogenous cellular autofluorescence to quantify metabolic factors. In this study, we employed the phasor analysis of FLIM to quantitatively resolve three exogenous, antibody-targeted fluorescent probes with similar spectral properties based on lifetime information alone. First, we demonstrated that three biomarkers that were spatially restricted to the cell membrane, cytosol, or nucleus could be accurately distinguished using FLIM and phasor analysis. Next, we successfully resolved and quantified three probes that were all targeted to cell surface biomarkers. Finally, we demonstrated that lifetime-based quantitation accuracy can be improved through intensity matching of various probe-biomarker combinations, which will expand the utility of this technique. Importantly, we reconstructed images for each individual probe, as well as an overlay of all three probes, from a single FLIM image. Our results demonstrate that FLIM and phasor analysis can be leveraged as a powerful tool for simultaneous detection of multiple biomarkers with high sensitivity and accuracy.

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