Publication: Wavelength-Encoded Laser Particles for Massively-Multiplexed Cell Tagging
No Thumbnail Available
Open/View Files
Date
2018-11-07
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Nature
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Martino, Nicola, Sheldon Kwok, Andreas Liapis, Sarah Forward, Hoon Jang, Kim Hwi-Min, Sarah Wu, Jiamin Wu, Paul Dannenberg, Jang Sun-Joo, and Lee Yong-Hee. 2019. Wavelength-Encoded Laser Particles for Massively-Multiplexed Cell Tagging. Nature Photonics 13, no. 10: 720-27.
Research Data
Abstract
Large-scale single-cell analyses have become increasingly important given the role of cellular heterogeneity in complex biological systems. However, no current techniques enable optical imaging of uniquely-tagged individual cells. Fluorescence-based approaches can only distinguish a small number of distinct cells or cell groups at a time because of spectral crosstalk between conventional fluorophores. Here we investigate large-scale cell tracking using intracellular laser particles as imaging probes that emit coherent laser light with a characteristic wavelength. Made of silica-coated semiconductor microcavities, these laser particles have single-mode emission over a broad range from 1170 to 1580 nm with sub-nm linewidths, enabling massive spectral multiplexing. We explore the stability and biocompatibility of these probes in vitro and their utility for wavelength-multiplexed cell tagging and imaging. We demonstrate real-time tracking of thousands of individual cells in a 3D tumour model over several days showing different behavioural phenotypes.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
Terms of Use
Metadata Only