Plasmonically Calibrated Label-Free Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy for Improved Multivariate Analysis of Living Cells in Cancer Subtyping and Drug Testing.


Journal

Analytical chemistry
ISSN: 1520-6882
Titre abrégé: Anal Chem
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0370536

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
16 03 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 6 3 2021
medline: 22 6 2021
entrez: 5 3 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Plasmonic nanostructure-enabled label-free surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) emerges as a rapid nondestructive molecular fingerprint characterization technique for complex biological samples. However, label-free SERS bioanalysis faces challenges in reliability and reproducibility due to SERS signals' high susceptibility to local optical field variations at plasmonic hotspots, which can bias correlations between the measured spectroscopic features and the actual molecular concentration profiles of complex biochemical matrices. Herein, we report that plasmonically enhanced electronic Raman scattering (ERS) signals from metal nanostructures can serve as a SERS calibration internal standard to improve multivariate analysis of living biological systems. Through side-by-side comparisons with noncalibrated SERS datasets, we demonstrate that the ERS-based SERS calibration can enhance supervised learning classification of label-free living cell SERS spectra in (1) subtyping breast cancer cells with different degrees of malignancy and (2) assessing cancer cells' drug responses at different dosages. Notably, the ERS-based SERS calibration has the advantages of excellent photostability under laser excitation, no spectral interference with biomolecule Raman signatures, and no occupation competition with biomolecules at hotspots. Therefore, we envision that the ERS-based SERS calibration can significantly boost the multivariate analysis performance in label-free SERS measurements of living biological systems and other complex biochemical matrices.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33666427
doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c05206
doi:

Substances chimiques

Pharmaceutical Preparations 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

4601-4610

Subventions

Organisme : NCI NIH HHS
ID : R21 CA102161
Pays : United States

Auteurs

Wonil Nam (W)

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States.

Xiang Ren (X)

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States.

Inyoung Kim (I)

Department of Statistics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States.

Jeannine Strobl (J)

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States.

Masoud Agah (M)

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States.

Wei Zhou (W)

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States.

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