Currently, pathologists rely on labor-intensive microscopic examination of tumor cells using century-old staining methods that can give false readings. Emerging BioMicroNano-technologies have the potential to provide accurate, realtime, high-throughput screening of tumor cells without the need for time-consuming sample preparation. These rapid, nano-optical techniques may play an important role in advancing early detection, diagnosis, and treatment of disease. In this report, we show that laser scanning confocal microscopy can be used to identify a previously unknown property of certain cancer cells that distinguishes them, with single-cell resolution, from closely related normal cells. This property is the correlation of light scattering and the spatial organization of mitochondria. In normal liver cells, mitochondria are highly organized within the cytoplasm and highly scattering, yielding a highly correlated signal. In cancer cells, mitochondria are more chaotically organized and poorly scattering. These differences correlate with important bioenergetic disturbances that are hallmarks of many types of cancer. In addition, we review recent work that exploits the new technology of nanolaser spectroscopy using the biocavity laser to characterize the unique spectral signatures of normal and transformed cells. These optical methods represent powerful new tools that hold promise for detecting cancer at an early stage and may help to limit delays in diagnosis and treatment.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/153303460500400602DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nanolaser spectroscopy
8
cells
8
tumor cells
8
diagnosis treatment
8
cancer cells
8
cells mitochondria
8
cancer
5
mitochondrial correlation
4
correlation microscopy
4
microscopy nanolaser
4

Similar Publications

Synthesis of Polyacrylamide Nanomicrospheres Modified with a Reactive Carbamate Surfactant for Efficient Profile Control and Blocking.

Polymers (Basel)

October 2024

College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, The Youth Innovation Team of Shaanxi Universities, Shaanxi University of Science & Technology, Xi'an 710021, China.

Article Synopsis
  • - Urethane surfactants (REQ) were created using specific compounds and then used to make modified nanomicrospheres (PER) through a special polymerization process, resulting in particles with an average size of 336 nm and good thermal stability.
  • - The study measured key characteristics of these nanomicrospheres through various scientific techniques and found they maintained their properties even in challenging conditions, such as high mineralization and temperature.
  • - Importantly, these PER nanomicrospheres significantly improve oil recovery efficiency during experiments, outperforming typical AM microspheres and enhancing the final recovery rate by 23.53% due to their structural design facilitating oil emulsification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Nanolasers using plasmonic crystals have become popular due to their improved light control, but separating their lasing modes for different applications has been a challenge.
  • This research presents a method to spatially separate two lasing modes in a dual-mode plasmonic laser using a specially designed beam-splitter that can achieve a mode separation of approximately 23° (up to 63° with adjustments).
  • The new design not only allows for separate beams and manual beam steering but also enhances output quality, suggesting potential uses in advanced fields like optical communication and quantum optics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how both radiative and non-radiative damping affect the lifetime of localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) modes in gold nanorods.
  • It finds that the lifetime of the LSPR mode varies with the nanorod's length, exhibiting different behaviors between super-radiant and sub-radiant modes.
  • Surprisingly, the super-radiant mode can have a lifetime comparable to or longer than the sub-radiant mode, challenging previous assumptions and suggesting practical applications in nano-lasers and sensitive molecular spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have proposed, implemented and investigated a novel, efficient quantum emitter based on an atomic-sized Ag nanocluster in a plasmonic resonator. The quantum emitter enables the realization of: (1) ultra-bright fluorescence, (2) narrow-band emission down to 4 nm, (3) ultra-short fluorescence lifetime. The fluorescence cross-section of a quantum emitter is on the order of ∼ 10 cm, which is comparable to the largest fluorescence cross-sections of dye molecules and quantum dots, and enables a light source with a record high intensity known only for plasmon nanolasers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enhanced near-field coupling and tunable topological transitions in hyperbolic van der Waals metasurfaces for optical nanomanipulation.

Nanoscale

May 2022

Center for the Physics of Low-Dimensional Materials, School of Physics and Electronics, Henan University, Kaifeng, 475004, China.

Hyperbolic metasurfaces based on van der Waals (vdW) materials support propagation of extremely anisotropic polaritons towards nanoscale light compression and manipulation, and thus have great potential in the applications of planar hyperlenses, nanolasing, quantum optics, and ultrasensitive infrared spectroscopy. Two-dimensional hexagonal boron nitride (-BN) subwavelength gratings as vdW metasurfaces can manipulate the propagation of hyperbolic polaritons at the level of single atomic layers, possessing a higher degree of field confinement and lower losses than conventional media. However, active manipulation of hyperbolic polaritonic waves in -BN midinfrared metasurfaces remains elusive.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!