Indocyanine green uptake by human tumor and non‑tumor cell lines and tissue

Biomed Rep. 2024 Jul 26;21(3):136. doi: 10.3892/br.2024.1824. eCollection 2024 Sep.

Abstract

Indocyanine green (ICG) is a potential promising dye for a better intraoperative tumor border definition and an improved patient outcome by potentially improving tumor border visualization compared with traditional white light guided surgery. Here, the cellular uptake of ICG in human squamous cell carcinoma (SCC026) and immortalized non-cancer skin (HaCaT) cell lines was evaluated to study the tumor-specific cellular uptake of ICG. The spatial distribution of ICG inside tumor tissue was investigated in tissue sections of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma at a microscopic level. ICG uptake and internalization was observed in living cells after 2.5 h and in the nucleus after 24 h. In dead cells, higher and faster uptake was observed. In the tissue sections, higher ICG signal intensity could be detected in connective tissue and surrounding clusters and blood vessels. In conclusion, no distinct ICG uptake by tumor cells was detected in cancer cell lines and tumor tissue. ICG localization in certain regions of tumor tissue appears to be a result of enhanced tissue permeability and retention, but not specific to tumor cells.

Keywords: indocyanine green; oral cancer; tumor cell; tumor marker.

Grants and funding

Funding: The present study was supported by the Thüringer Aufbaubank/European Regional Development Fund (grant no. 2020 FGI 0029), Carl Zeiss Foundation, Virtual Workshop for Digitization in Sciences (grant no. 0563-2.8/738/2) and Coherent Raman Imaging for the molecular study of origin of diseases (EU Horizon 2020-ICT; grant no. 101016923).