Paper
25 February 2006 Feeling with light for cancer
Mireille Martin, Karla Mueller, Falk Wottawah, Stefan Schinkinger, Bryan Lincoln, Maren Romeyke, Josef A. Käs
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Even minute alterations in a cell's intracellular scaffolds, i.e. the cytoskeleton, which organize a cell, result in significant changes in a cell's elastic strength since the cytoskeletal mechanics nonlinearly amplify these alterations. Light has been used to observe cells since Leeuwenhoek's times and novel techniques in optical microscopy are frequently developed in biological physics. In contrast, with the optical stretcher we use the forces caused by light described by Maxwell's surface tensor to feel cells. Thus, the stretcher exemplifies the other type of biophotonic devices that do not image but manipulate cells. The optical stretcher uses optical surface forces to stretch cells between two opposing laser beams, while optical gradient forces, which are used in optical tweezers, play a minor role and only contribute to a stable trapping configuration. The combination of the optical stretcher's sensitivity and high throughput capacity make a cell's "optical stretchiness" an extremely precise parameter to distinguish different cell types. This avoids the use of expensive, often unspecific molecular cell markers. This technique applies particularly well to cells with dissimilar degrees of differentiation, as a cell's maturation correlates with an increase in cytoskeletal strength. Because malignant cells gradually dedifferentiate during the progression of cancer, the optical stretcher should allow, the direct staging from early dysplasia to metastasis of a tumor sample obtained by MRI-guided fine needle aspirations or cytobrushes. With two prototypes of a microfluidic optical stretcher at our hands, we prepare preclinical trials to study its potential in resolving breast tumors' progression towards metastasis. Since the optical stretcher represents a basic technology for cell recognition and sorting, an abundance of further biomedical applications can be envisioned.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mireille Martin, Karla Mueller, Falk Wottawah, Stefan Schinkinger, Bryan Lincoln, Maren Romeyke, and Josef A. Käs "Feeling with light for cancer", Proc. SPIE 6080, Advanced Biomedical and Clinical Diagnostic Systems IV, 60800P (25 February 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.637899
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Cytoskeletons

Cancer

Tissue optics

Microfluidics

Biomedical optics

Tumors

Chemical elements

RELATED CONTENT


Back to Top