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The Transformation of the Nuclear Nanoarchitecture in Human Field Carcinogenesis
Author(s) -
Greta M. Bauer,
Yolanda StypulaCyrus,
Hariharan Subramanian,
Lusik Cherkezyan,
Parvathi Viswanathan,
Di Zhang,
Radha Iyengar,
Saurabh Bagalkar,
Justin Derbas,
Taylor Graff,
Scott Gladstein,
Luay M. Almassalha,
John E. Chandler,
Hemant K. Roy,
Vadim Backman
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
future science oa
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.825
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2056-5623
DOI - 10.4155/fsoa-2017-0027
Subject(s) - carcinogenesis , chromatin , biology , nanoscopic scale , microscopy , cancer , microbiology and biotechnology , materials science , pathology , medicine , nanotechnology , genetics , dna
Morphological alterations of the nuclear texture are a hallmark of carcinogenesis. At later stages of disease, these changes are well characterized and detectable by light microscopy. Evidence suggests that similar albeit nanoscopic alterations develop at the predysplastic stages of carcinogenesis. Using the novel optical technique partial wave spectroscopic microscopy, we identified profound changes in the nanoscale chromatin topology in microscopically normal tissue as a common event in the field carcinogenesis of many cancers. In particular, higher-order chromatin structure at supranucleosomal length scales (20–200 nm) becomes exceedingly heterogeneous, a measure we quantify using the disorder strength ( L d ) of the spatial arrangement of chromatin density. Here, we review partial wave spectroscopic nanocytology clinical studies and the technology's promise as an early cancer screening technology.

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