Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have shown that a newly developed microscopy technique can capture dynamic 3D images of an entire zebrafish larvae while maintaining cellular resolution in all three dimensions. By giving scientists an unprecedented view of how cells interact in their most natural state, the method could revolutionize biomedical research and provide information useful in developing new treatments for diseases.
“Unraveling underlying cellular structures and their interaction is fundamentally important to understanding life,” says research team leader Ji Yi of Johns Hopkins University. “However, the limitations of light diffraction make it difficult to image with 3D cellular resolution over large areas of several millimeters. We circumvent the trade-offs between field of view, depth resolution and imaging speed to achieve 4D cellular resolution over a much larger field of view than previously possible.”
An inherent challenge to imaging is difficulty using a single set of optics to acquire both large scene coverage and enough resolution to see details. While modern smartphones often use more than one camera set to overcome this challenge, this isn’t typically feasible with microscopy. “Instead of adding another camera set, we used an optical component known as a transmission grating to create a diffractive light sheet,” said Yi. “This improves depth sectioning and resolution while using a low magnification lens. The result is the ability to perform mesoscopic scale imaging over a field of view that is several millimeters wide while still being able to resolve individual cells in 3D.”
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The researchers used the technique, called mesoscopic oblique plane microscopy, to image two important large-scale model systems—living zebrafish larvae that were 3-4 mm long and mouse brain slices in which the cells were kept alive. Both expressed fluorescence proteins that labeled specific cell types such as neurons and blood cells.
They were able to image a field of view measuring up to 5.4 × 3.3 millimeters with a resolution of 2.5× 3 × 6 microns, which allowed volumetric imaging of 3D cellular structures with a single scan. For the zebrafish larvae, they captured whole-body volumetric recordings of neuronal activity at 2 Hz volume rate, uniquely enabling studies on neural circuits over the entire central nervous system in a vertebrate. They also showed whole-body volumetric recordings of blood flow dynamics at 5 Hz with 3D cellular resolution, to allow single-cell tracking within the complete 3D circulation system for the first time.
The team says this ability to look at biological systems in their larger context provides holistic information for complex biological systems. “Our work also lays a foundation for further development that would allow even faster, larger and deeper biological imaging,” says Yi.
The findings were published recently in the journal Optica. The team plans to work on improving light collection efficiency to further increase the imaging speed and to incorporate multiphoton imaging to allow better penetration depth—another long-standing challenge in optical imaging.