Cancerous cells exhibit several key differences from healthy cells that help identify them as dangerous.
For instance, the pH -- the level of acidity -- within a cancerous cell is not the same as the pH within a healthy cell.
Researchers from the National University of Singapore developed a method of using machine learning to determine whether a single cell is cancerous by detecting its pH. They describe their work in the journal APL Bioengineering, from AIP Publishing.
"The ability to identify single cells has acquired a paramount importance in the field of precision and personalised medicine," said Chwee Teck Lim, one of the authors.
"This is because it is the only way to account for the inherent heterogeneity associated with any biological specimen."
Lim explained that other techniques for examining a single cell can induce toxic effects or even kill the cell.
Their approach, however, can discriminate cells originating from normal tissues from cells originating from cancerous tissues, as well as among different types of cancer, while keeping the cells alive.
The method relies on treating the cells with bromothymol blue, a pH-sensitive dye that changes colour depending on how acidic a solution is.
Each type of cell exhibits its own unique fingerprint of red, green, and blue (RGB) based on its intracellular acidity.
Because cancerous transformation alters the cell's pH, an unhealthy cell will respond to bromothymol blue differently, resulting in a characteristic shift of its RGB fingerprint.
By training a machine learning algorithm to map combinations of colours to the disease state of individual cells, the authors can easily recognise an undesired shift.
This allows them to determine the health of a cell using only simple, standard equipment: an inverted microscope and a colour camera.
"Our method allowed us to classify single cells of various human tissues, both normal and cancerous, by focusing solely on the inherent acidity levels that each cell type tends to exhibit, and using simple and inexpensive equipment," Lim said.
For practical implementations of this approach, medical professionals will need to non-invasively acquire a sample of the cells in question.
"One potential application of this technique would be in liquid biopsy, where tumour cells that escaped from the primary tumour can be isolated in a minimally invasive fashion from bodily fluids," Lim said.
The group is looking forward to advancing the concept further to try to detect different stages of malignancies from the cells.
They envision a real-time version of the procedure, in which cells suspended in a solution can be automatically recognised and handled.
Source: American Institute of Physics