Andor Deep-Depletion CCD Camera Captures Advance That Could Speed-Up Introduction of Stem Cell Therapy

11th October 2011, Belfast, UK: Many medical researchers believe that stem cell therapy will revolutionise the treatment of human disease and may provide treatments for many currently incurable diseases. However, one problem still to be overcome is controlling the excessive proliferation of cells with unwanted phenotypes after transplantation to prevent tissue overgrowth and tumour formation.

Unfortunately, most techniques currently available for the characterisation of cells are invasive and make the cells unusable. Now, a Nottingham University team led by Dr Ioan Notingher has developed a non-invasive Raman microspectroscopy (RMS) technique that phenotypically identifies live cardiomyocyte cells within highly heterogeneous cell populations with greater than 96% sensitivity and specificity.

The team used an Andor iDus 401A-BRDD cooled, deep-depletion, back-illuminated CCD camera attached to a purpose-built Raman microspectrometer to record spectra from individual cells derived from micrometric regions of human embryonic stem cells (hESC). By comparing with matching immunofluorescence images from the same cells, they showed that the Raman spectra correspond to the spatial distribution of biomolecules such as nucleic acids, proteins, lipids and carbohydrates, and that this can be used to discriminate between different cell types.

“We needed the shortest possible acquisition times for the Raman spectra and the Andor iDus 401A camera is ideal for this application, allowing measurements of Raman spectra from selected positions in the cells in only 0.5 seconds,” says Dr Ioan Notingher. “Also, the detectors are optimised for the spectral regions in which we work, 800-900 nm, which is vital for avoiding photodamage to the cells. Since RMS has only a minimal background signal from water, it allows repeated observations of viable cells maintained under physiological conditions.

“Together with Professor Denning, also of the University of Nottingham and a leader in regenerative medicine, we have validated the potential of RMS for allowing the non-invasive phenotypic identification of hESC progeny. With further development, such label-free optical techniques may enable the separation of high-purity cell populations with mature phenotypes and provide repeated measurements to monitor time-dependent molecular changes in live hESCs during differentiation in vitro.”

According to Antoine Varagnat, Product Specialist at Andor, “the iDus has been the detector of choice in the research community for many years and Dr Notingher’s breakthrough work is a fantastic testimony to the performance of this platform. With its unique -100°C thermo-electric cooling platform and highest sensitivity in the near-infrared (NIR), as well as an extremely compact design for ease of integration to complex experiments, the iDus is just the right camera for NIR micro-Raman applications.”.

Compared to existing techniques, Raman microspectroscopy has several unique advantages for characterizing heterogeneous cell populations that makes it ideal for stem cell therapy. Conventional cell biology assays, such as PCR and Western Blotting, are invasive, require a large number of cells, and present averaged results representing entire cell populations. Fluorescence and magnetic cell sorting approaches rely on lineage-specific surface markers expressed on the cell membrane. However, many cell types, including cardiomyocytes, do not express these markers on the surface and are rendered unusable in a clinical environment by fixation and permeabilization. And, although transgenic strategies may be used to express surface markers, the complex genetic modifications also mean that the resulting cells are not suitable for clinical applications.

Andor’s modular Spectroscopy solutions encompass a wide range of high performance CCD, ICCD and EMCCD detectors, as well as a comprehensive range of Research-grade spectrograph platforms and versatile interfacing to microscopes. To learn more about the iDus camera series and their use in spectroscopy, please visit the spectroscopy section of the Andor website (http://www.andor.com/spectroscopy_solutions/).

Typical immunostaining images of individual cardiomyocytes (CM) (A) and non-cardiomyocyte (non-CM) (B) derived from hESCs: cell nuclei DAPI (blue), cardiac a-actinin (red). (C) Raman spectra of the same cells Raman spectral maps corresponding to the cardiac Raman spectral marker for three typical CMs and fluorescence staining for alpha-actinin (myofibrils) and DAPI (cell nuclei). (b) Typical point Raman spectra taken from various points inside cells, corresponding to regions rich in myofibrils, nucleus, and lipid bodies First four PC loading spectra in the PCA of Raman spectra of CMs and non-CMs. The variance captured by each PC is shown in brackets. (B) Distribution of the scores corresponding to the first PC (PC1) for CMs (circles) and non-CMs (squares)

Reference

Flavius C. Pascut, Huey T. Goh, Nathan Welch, Lee D. Buttery, Chris Denning, and Ioan Notingher. “Noninvasive Detection and Imaging of Molecular Markers in Live Cardiomyocytes Derived from Human Embryonic Stem Cells,” Biophysical Journal 2011, 100, 251-259

About Andor Technology

Andor is a world leader in Scientific Imaging, Spectroscopy Solutions and Microscopy Systems. Established in 1989 from Queen’s University in Belfast, Northern Ireland, Andor Technology now employs over 300 people in 16 offices worldwide, distributing its portfolio of over 80 products to 10,000 customers in 55 countries.

Using the latest cutting edge technologies, Andor designs and manufactures robust, high performance instruments allowing scientists around the world to measure light down to a single photon and capture events occurring within 1 billionth of a second. This unique capability is helping them push back the boundaries of knowledge from nano-scale to universe-scale level in fields as diverse as drug discovery, new material development and analysis, medical diagnosis, food quality control, art restoration, astronomy and solar energy research.

More information about Andor Technology PLC (LSE: AND) is available at the company’s website (www.andor.com).

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