Lossless Immunocytochemistry Based on Large-Scale Porous Hydrogel Pellicle for Accurate Rare Cell Analysis

Hyeong Jung Woo, Seung Hoon Kim, Hyun Gyu Kang, Taehoon Kim, Sooyeol Kim, Jong Man Kim, Jae Young Kim, Seung Joon Lee, Young Zoon Kim, So Yeon Oh, Ji Hyae Lim, Hyun Mee Ryu, Minseok S. Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Rare cells, such as circulating tumor cells or circulating fetal cells, provide important information for the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer and prenatal diagnosis. Since undercounting only a few cells can lead to significant misdiagnosis and incorrect decisions in subsequent treatment, it is crucial to minimize cell loss, particularly for rare cells. Moreover, the morphological and genetic information on cells should be preserved as intact as possible for downstream analysis. The conventional immunocytochemistry (ICC), however, fails to meet these requirements, causing unexpected cell loss and deformation of the cell organelles which may mislead the classification of benign and malignant cells. In this study, a novel ICC technique for preparing lossless cellular specimens was developed to improve the diagnostic accuracy of rare cell analysis and analyze intact cellular morphology. To this end, a robust and reproducible porous hydrogel pellicle was developed. This hydrogel encapsulates cells to minimize cell loss from the repeated exchange of reagents and prevent cell deformation. The soft hydrogel pellicle allows stable and intact cell picking for further downstream analysis, which is difficult with conventional ICC methods that permanently immobilize cells. The lossless ICC platform will pave the way for robust and precise rare cell analysis toward clinical practice.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)15059-15070
Number of pages12
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume15
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 29 Mar 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.

Keywords

  • circulating fetal cell
  • circulating tumor cell
  • hydrogel
  • immunocytochemistry
  • intact cell morphology
  • lossless cell staining
  • rare cell analysis
  • single-cell analysis

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