Lung cancer leads to a series of physiological abnormalities. The remodeling of extracellular matrix (especially elastin and collagen fibers) has been drawing increasing attention as it is suggested to be a hallmark of tumorigenesis. However, the interaction between these crucial matrix components, together with their relationship to mechanical changes, remains poorly understood. Here, we develop a quantitative multiphoton microscopy system to elucidate the relationship between tissue stiffening and elastin-collagen interplay in lung cancer. Based on label-free images of both fibers, we establish a metric termed resemblance metric (RM) to characterize their interaction by quantifying the similarity of their morpho-structural distributions. Specifically, RM is found to increase with lung tumorigenesis, and exhibits superior sensitivity in identifying human lung cancer through ex vivo quantitative imaging. Nanoindentation results suggest a strong correlation between tissue stiffness and inter-channel interaction, notably greater than that between stiffness and any individual morpho-structural feature of either fiber type. Finally, the translational potential of RM-based imaging is demonstrated through tumor boundary identification via in vivo imaging within a mouse model harboring human lung cancer. Unique remodeling of elastin and collagen fibers in extracellular matrix along lung tumorigenesis is resolved with label-free multiphoton microscopy and a quantitative measure termed resemblance metric.
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Wang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8962d6c1944d70ce076ed — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-026-10004-6
Chuncheng Wang
Shuhao Qian
Wenyue Li
Communications Biology
Zhejiang University
First Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University
Jiaxing University
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