Correlative imaging to resolve molecular structures in individual cells: Substrate validation study for super-resolution infrared microspectroscopy

Nanomedicine. 2022 Jul:43:102563. doi: 10.1016/j.nano.2022.102563. Epub 2022 Apr 30.

Abstract

Light microscopy has been a favorite tool of biological studies for almost a century, recently producing detailed images with exquisite molecular specificity achieving spatial resolution at nanoscale. However, light microscopy is insufficient to provide chemical information as a standalone technique. An increasing amount of evidence demonstrates that optical photothermal infrared microspectroscopy (O-PTIR) is a valuable imaging tool that can extract chemical information to locate molecular structures at submicron resolution. To further investigate the applicability of sub-micron infrared microspectroscopy for biomedical applications, we analyzed the contribution of substrate chemistry to the infrared spectra acquired from individual neurons grown on various imaging substrates. To provide an example of correlative immunofluorescence/O-PTIR imaging, we used immunofluorescence to locate specific organelles for O-PTIR measurement, thus capturing molecular structures at the sub-cellular level directly in cells, which is not possible using traditional infrared microspectroscopy or immunofluorescence microscopy alone.

Keywords: Brain; Glass coverslips; Microspectroscopy; Neuron; Optical photothermal infrared; Single-cell analysis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Microscopy, Fluorescence
  • Molecular Structure
  • Spectrophotometry, Infrared* / methods