Rapid mechanical phenotyping of breast cancer cells based on stochastic intracellular fluctuations
Author
Date
2024-11-15Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/11351/12394DOI
10.1016/j.isci.2024.110960
ISSN
2589-0042
WOS
001338900500001
PMID
39493877
Abstract
Predicting the phenotypic impact of genetic variants and treatments is crucial in cancer genetics and precision oncology. Here, we have developed a noise decorrelation method that enables quantitative phase imaging (QPI) with the capability for label-free noninvasive mapping of intracellular dry mass fluctuations within the millisecond-to-second timescale regime, previously inaccessible due to temporal phase noise. Applied to breast cancer cells, this method revealed regions driven by thermal forces and regions of intense activity fueled by ATP hydrolysis. Intriguingly, as malignancy increases, the cells strategically expand these active regions to satisfy increasing energy demands. We propose parameters encapsulating key information about the spatiotemporal distribution of intracellular fluctuations, enabling precise phenotyping. This technique addresses the need for accurate, rapid functional screening methods in cancer medicine.
Keywords
Cancer; Cancer systems biologyBibliographic citation
Cano Á, Yubero ML, Millá C, Puerto-Belda V, Ruz JJ, Kosaka PM, et al. Rapid mechanical phenotyping of breast cancer cells based on stochastic intracellular fluctuations. iScience. 2024 Nov 15;27(11):110960.
Audience
Professionals
This item appears in following collections
- VHIO - Articles científics [1250]
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