4.7 Article

Optical Diffraction Tomography and Raman Confocal Microscopy for the Investigation of Vacuoles Associated with Cancer Senescent Engulfing Cells

Journal

BIOSENSORS-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bios13110973

Keywords

microscopy; optical diffraction tomography; Raman spectroscopy; therapy-induced senescence; cell engulfing; vacuole; cancer; cell in cell

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This study used optical diffraction tomography and Raman spectroscopy to analyze the structure of vacuoles in cancer cells and detect chemical species within them. The researchers found that the vacuoles contained diluted cell-derived macromolecules and could be distinguished from the surrounding medium and cells using their Raman fingerprint. This noninvasive approach is valuable for studying complex biological processes.
Wild-type p53 cancer therapy-induced senescent cells frequently engulf and degrade neighboring ones inside a massive vacuole in their cytoplasm. After clearance of the internalized cell, the vacuole persists, seemingly empty, for several hours. Despite large vacuoles being associated with cell death, this process is known to confer a survival advantage to cancer engulfing cells, leading to therapy resistance and tumor relapse. Previous attempts to resolve the vacuolar structure and visualize their content using dyes were unsatisfying for lack of known targets and ineffective dye penetration and/or retention. Here, we overcame this problem by applying optical diffraction tomography and Raman spectroscopy to MCF7 doxorubicin-induced engulfing cells. We demonstrated a real ability of cell tomography and Raman to phenotype complex microstructures, such as cell-in-cells and vacuoles, and detect chemical species in extremely low concentrations within live cells in a completely label-free fashion. We show that vacuoles had a density indistinguishable to the medium, but were not empty, instead contained diluted cell-derived macromolecules, and we could discern vacuoles from medium and cells using their Raman fingerprint. Our approach is useful for the noninvasive investigation of senescent engulfing (and other peculiar) cells in unperturbed conditions, crucial for a better understanding of complex biological processes.

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