Assessment of chemotherapeutic effects on cancer cells using adhesion noise spectroscopy

Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2024 May 13:12:1385730. doi: 10.3389/fbioe.2024.1385730. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

With cancer as one of the leading causes of death worldwide, there is a need for the development of accurate, cost-effective, easy-to-use, and fast drug-testing assays. While the NCI 60 cell-line screening as the gold standard is based on a colorimetric assay, monitoring cells electrically constitutes a label-free and non-invasive tool to assess the cytotoxic effects of a chemotherapeutic treatment on cancer cells. For decades, impedance-based cellular assays extensively investigated various cell characteristics affected by drug treatment but lack spatiotemporal resolution. With progress in microelectrode fabrication, high-density Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS)-based microelectrode arrays (MEAs) with subcellular resolution and time-continuous recording capability emerged as a potent alternative. In this article, we present a new cell adhesion noise (CAN)-based electrical imaging technique to expand CMOS MEA cell-biology applications: CAN spectroscopy enables drug screening quantification with single-cell spatial resolution. The chemotherapeutic agent 5-Fluorouracil exerts a cytotoxic effect on colorectal cancer (CRC) cells hampering cell proliferation and lowering cell viability. For proof-of-concept, we found sufficient accuracy and reproducibility for CAN spectroscopy compared to a commercially available standard colorimetric biological assay. This label-free, non-invasive, and fast electrical imaging technique complements standardized cancer screening methods with significant advances over established impedance-based approaches.

Keywords: CMOS microelectrode array; anti-cancer therapeutics; cell adhesion noise spectroscopy; colorectal cancer cells; human dermal fibroblasts.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The authors acknowledge TU Wien Bibliothek for financial support through its Open Access Funding Programme. This work was partially supported by funding through the IRA-SME project ELEVATE (FFG Grant No. 895365) to GZ and SPL.