Super-multiplex vibrational imaging
Abstract
The ability to visualize directly a large number of distinct molecular species inside cells is increasingly essential for understanding complex systems and processes. Even though existing methods have successfully been used to explore structure–function relationships in nervous systems, to profile RNA in situ, to reveal the heterogeneity of tumour microenvironments and to study dynamic macromolecular assembly, it remains challenging to image many species with high selectivity and sensitivity under biological conditions. For instance, fluorescence microscopy faces a 'colour barrier', owing to the intrinsically broad (about 1,500 inverse centimetres) and featureless nature of fluorescence spectra that limits the number of resolvable colours to two to five (or seven to nine if using complicated instrumentation and analysis). Spontaneous Raman microscopy probes vibrational transitions with much narrower resonances (peak width of about 10 inverse centimetres) and so does not suffer from this problem, but weak signals make many bio-imaging applications impossible. Although surface-enhanced Raman scattering offers high sensitivity and multiplicity, it cannot be readily used to image specific molecular targets quantitatively inside live cells. Here we use stimulated Raman scattering under electronic pre-resonance conditions to image target molecules inside living cells with very high vibrational selectivity and sensitivity (down to 250 nanomolar with a time constant of 1 millisecond). We create a palette of triple-bond-conjugated near-infrared dyes that each displays a single peak in the cell-silent Raman spectral window; when combined with available fluorescent probes, this palette provides 24 resolvable colours, with the potential for further expansion. Proof-of-principle experiments on neuronal co-cultures and brain tissues reveal cell-type-dependent heterogeneities in DNA and protein metabolism under physiological and pathological conditions, underscoring the potential of this 24-colour (super-multiplex) optical imaging approach for elucidating intricate interactions in complex biological systems.
Additional Information
© 2017 Macmillan Publishers Limited. received 21 September 2016; accepted 3 March 2017. Published online 19 April 2017. We thank L. Brus and A. McDermott for discussions, M. Jimenez and C. Dupre for suggestions, and L. Shi for technical assistance. W.M. acknowledges support from an NIH Director's New Innovator Award (1DP2EB016573), R01 (EB020892), the US Army Research Office (W911NF-12-1-0594), the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation. R.Y. is supported by the NEI (EY024503, EY011787) and NIMH (MH101218, MH100561). Author Contributions: L.W. carried out the spectroscopy, microscopy and biological studies together with L.S. and with the help of L.Z., F.H. and R.Y.; Z.C. designed and performed chemical synthesis together with R.L., A.V.A. and L.W. under the guidance of V.W.C. and W.M.; L.W. and W.M. conceived the concept; and L.W., Z.C. and W.M. wrote the manuscript with input from all authors. Data availability: All data that support this study are available from the corresponding author on request. Source Data for Fig. 4e are available in the online version of the paper. Competing interests: Columbia University has filed a patent application based on this work.Attached Files
Accepted Version - nihms858426.pdf
Supplemental Material - nature22051-s1.pdf
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf1.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf2.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf3.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf4.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf5.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf6.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf7.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf8.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-sf9.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-st1.jpg
Supplemental Material - nature22051-st2.jpg
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Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC5939925
- Eprint ID
- 86916
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20180608-105013735
- NIH
- 1DP2EB016573
- NIH
- R01 EB020892
- Army Research Office (ARO)
- W911NF-12-1-0594
- Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
- Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation
- NIH
- EY024503
- NIH
- EY011787
- NIH
- MH101218
- NIH
- MH100561
- Created
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2018-06-08Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-17Created from EPrint's last_modified field