TY - JOUR
T1 - Local pH mapping in the cell adhesion nano-interfaces on a pH-responsive fluorescence-dye-immobilized substrate
AU - Masaike, Sayaka
AU - Tsuji, Yukie
AU - Kidoaki, Satoru
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI grant numbers JP19H05627, JP21K18326, and JP21KK0127. A part of this work was supported by “Advanced Research Infrastructure for Materials and Nanotechnology in Japan (ARIM)” of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). Grant Number JPMXP1222KU1038.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Cell-substrate adhesion nano-interfaces can, in principle, exhibit a spatial distribution of local pH values under the influence of the weakly acidic microenvironment of glycocalyx grafted on lipid bilayer cell membrane which is compressed and closely attached to culture substrate in the vicinity of integrin-adhesion complexes. However, a simple local pH distribution imaging methodology has not been developed. In this study, to visualize the local pH distribution at the cell adhesion interface, we prepared glass substrates chemically modified with a pH-responsive fluorescent dye fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), observed the distribution of FITC fluorescence intensity at the adhesion interface of fibroblast (NIH/3T3) and cancer cells (HeLa), and compared the FITC images with the observed distribution of focal adhesions. FITC images were converted to pH mapping based on the pH-fluorescence calibration data of surface-immobilized FITC pre-measured in different pH media, which showed significantly larger regions with lowered pH level (6.8–7.0) from outside the cell (pH 7.4) were observed at the thick inner periphery of HeLa cells while 3T3 cells exhibited smaller lowered pH regions at the thin periphery. The lowered pH regions overlapped with many focal adhesions, and image analysis showed that larger focal adhesions tend to possess more lowered pH sites inside, reflecting enhanced glycocalyx compression due to accumulated integrin-adhesion ligand binding. This tendency was stronger for HeLa than for 3T3 cells. The role of glycocalyx compression and the pH reduction at the cell adhesive interface is discussed. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
AB - Cell-substrate adhesion nano-interfaces can, in principle, exhibit a spatial distribution of local pH values under the influence of the weakly acidic microenvironment of glycocalyx grafted on lipid bilayer cell membrane which is compressed and closely attached to culture substrate in the vicinity of integrin-adhesion complexes. However, a simple local pH distribution imaging methodology has not been developed. In this study, to visualize the local pH distribution at the cell adhesion interface, we prepared glass substrates chemically modified with a pH-responsive fluorescent dye fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), observed the distribution of FITC fluorescence intensity at the adhesion interface of fibroblast (NIH/3T3) and cancer cells (HeLa), and compared the FITC images with the observed distribution of focal adhesions. FITC images were converted to pH mapping based on the pH-fluorescence calibration data of surface-immobilized FITC pre-measured in different pH media, which showed significantly larger regions with lowered pH level (6.8–7.0) from outside the cell (pH 7.4) were observed at the thick inner periphery of HeLa cells while 3T3 cells exhibited smaller lowered pH regions at the thin periphery. The lowered pH regions overlapped with many focal adhesions, and image analysis showed that larger focal adhesions tend to possess more lowered pH sites inside, reflecting enhanced glycocalyx compression due to accumulated integrin-adhesion ligand binding. This tendency was stronger for HeLa than for 3T3 cells. The role of glycocalyx compression and the pH reduction at the cell adhesive interface is discussed. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
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U2 - 10.1007/s44211-022-00239-8
DO - 10.1007/s44211-022-00239-8
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85144671109
JO - Analytical Sciences
JF - Analytical Sciences
SN - 0910-6340
ER -