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FTIR Microspectroscopy Coupled with Two-Class Discrimination Segregates Markers Responsible for Inter- and Intra-Category Variance in Exfoliative Cervical Cytology

Infrared (IR) absorbance of cellular biomolecules generates a vibrational spectrum, which can be exploited as a “biochemical fingerprint” of a particular cell type. Biomolecules absorb in the mid-IR (2–20 μm) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopy applied to discriminate different c...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Walsh, Michael J., Singh, Maneesh N., Stringfellow, Helen F., Pollock, Hubert M., Hammiche, Azzedine, Grude, Olaug, Fullwood, Nigel J., Pitt, Mark A., Martin-Hirsch, Pierre L., Martin, Francis L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2493409/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18677422
Descripción
Sumario:Infrared (IR) absorbance of cellular biomolecules generates a vibrational spectrum, which can be exploited as a “biochemical fingerprint” of a particular cell type. Biomolecules absorb in the mid-IR (2–20 μm) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopy applied to discriminate different cell types (exfoliative cervical cytology collected into buffered fixative solution) was evaluated. This consisted of cervical cytology free of atypia (i.e. normal; n = 60), specimens categorised as containing low-grade changes (i.e. CIN1 or LSIL; n = 60) and a further cohort designated as high-grade (CIN2/3 or HSIL; n = 60). IR spectral analysis was coupled with principal component analysis (PCA), with or without subsequent linear discriminant analysis (LDA), to determine if normal versus low-grade versus high-grade exfoliative cytology could be segregated. With increasing severity of atypia, decreases in absorbance intensity were observable throughout the 1,500 cm(−1) to 1,100 cm(−1) spectral region; this included proteins (1,460 cm(−1)), glycoproteins (1,380 cm(−1)), amide III (1,260 cm(−1)), asymmetric (ν(as)) PO(2)(−) (1,225 cm(−1)) and carbohydrates (1,155 cm(−1)). In contrast, symmetric (ν(s)) PO(2)(−) (1,080 cm(−1)) appeared to have an elevated intensity in high-grade cytology. Inter-category variance was associated with protein and DNA conformational changes whereas glycogen status strongly influenced intra-category. Multivariate data reduction of IR spectra using PCA with LDA maximises inter-category variance whilst reducing the influence of intra-class variation towards an objective approach to class cervical cytology based on a biochemical profile.