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Time-lapse X-ray phase-contrast microtomography for in vivo imaging and analysis of morphogenesis

Authors :
Xianghui Xiao
Carole LaBonne
Tilo Baumbach
Julian Moosmann
Jubin Kashef
Ralf Hofmann
Venera Weinhardt
Alexey Ershov
Maneeshi S. Prasad
Source :
Nature Protocols. 9:294-304
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2014.

Abstract

X-ray phase-contrast microtomography (XPCμT) is a label-free, high-resolution imaging modality for analyzing early development of vertebrate embryos in vivo by using time-lapse sequences of 3D volumes. Here we provide a detailed protocol for applying this technique to study gastrulation in Xenopus laevis (African clawed frog) embryos. In contrast to μMRI, XPCμT images optically opaque embryos with subminute temporal and micrometer-range spatial resolution. We describe sample preparation, culture and suspension of embryos, tomographic imaging with a typical duration of 2 h (gastrulation and neurulation stages), intricacies of image pre-processing, phase retrieval, tomographic reconstruction, segmentation and motion analysis. Moreover, we briefly discuss our present understanding of X-ray dose effects (heat load and radiolysis), and we outline how to optimize the experimental configuration with respect to X-ray energy, photon flux density, sample-detector distance, exposure time per tomographic projection, numbers of projections and time-lapse intervals. The protocol requires an interdisciplinary effort of developmental biologists for sample preparation and data interpretation, X-ray physicists for planning and performing the experiment and applied mathematicians/computer scientists/physicists for data processing and analysis. Sample preparation requires 9-48 h, depending on the stage of development to be studied. Data acquisition takes 2-3 h per tomographic time-lapse sequence. Data processing and analysis requires a further 2 weeks, depending on the availability of computing power and the amount of detail required to address a given scientific problem.

Details

ISSN :
17502799 and 17542189
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Protocols
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....19b2c0230a80d32f69c5c1bb7a68d720
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nprot.2014.033