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Royal Society of Chemistry, Analyst, 6(140), p. 1852-1858

DOI: 10.1039/c4an02298j

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Making Colourful Sense of Raman Images of Single Cells

Journal article published in 2015 by Lorna Ashton, Katherine Anne Hollywood ORCID, Royston Goodacre
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

In order to understand biological systems it is important to gain pertinent information on the spatial localisation of chemicals within cells. With the relatively recent advent of high-resolution chemical imaging this is being realised and one rapidly developing area of research is the Raman mapping of single cells, an approach whose success has vast potential for numerous areas of biomedical research. However, there is a danger of undermining the potential routine use of Raman mapping due to a lack of consistency and transparency in the way false-shaded Raman images are constructed. In this study we demonstrate, through the use of simulated data and real Raman maps of single human keratinocyte (HaCaT) cells, how changes in the application of colour shading can dramatically alter the final Raman images. In order to avoid ambiguity and potential subjectivity in image interpretation we suggest that data distribution plots are used to aid shading approaches and that extreme care is taken to use the most appropriate false-shading for the biomedical question under investigation.