MethodsX (Jan 2018)

Quantitative imaging of membrane micropolarity in living cells and tissues by spectral phasors analysis

  • Flavio Di Giacinto,
  • Claudio De Angelis,
  • Marco De Spirito,
  • Giuseppe Maulucci

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 1399 – 1412

Abstract

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Intracellular micropolarity is essential in several metabolic processes, as it controls membrane permeability, regulating the fluxes of molecules and energy. Here we describe a method for the determination of the micropolarity in living cells using spectral confocal microscopy. The method is based on a phasor analysis of spectrally resolved images of live cells, labelled with the solvatochromic probe Nile Red. An application is provided to extract a polarity profile from the acquired Spectral datasets, which represent the contribution of hyperpolar, polar and non-polar lipids, and to generate a micropolarity map at submicrometric spatial resolution. A metabolic parameter, representing a quantitative index of the fatty acid-triacylglycerol turnover, is also furnished. This method allows a functional profiling of cells and tissues and the detection of metabolic imbalances between lipid storage and usage. • Use of spectral resolved confocal microscopy of Nile Red labelled cells for pixel resolved determination of the membranes micropolarity. • Spectral acquisition increases the specificity and sensitivity of the detection to provide a polarity profile and a metabolic index for fatty acid-TG turnover. • Use of spectral resolved confocal microscopy of Nile Red labelled cells for pixel resolved determination of the membranes micropolarity. Method name: Quantitative imaging of cell micropolarity, Keywords: Spectral phasors, Nile Red, Membranes micropolarity, Metabolic imaging, Lipids, Confocal microscopy, Fatty acids, Triglycerides, Lipid droplets