Back to Search Start Over

Probing neural tissue with airy light-sheet microscopy: investigation of imaging performance at depth within turbid media

Authors :
Kishan Dholakia
Sanya Aggarwal
Javier Tello
Jonathan Nylk
Kaley McCluskey
Brown, Thomas G.
Cogswell, Carol J.
Wilson, Tony
EPSRC
University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy
University of St Andrews. School of Medicine
University of St Andrews. Biomedical Sciences Research Complex
Source :
Three-Dimensional and Multidimensional Microscopy: Image Acquisition and Processing XXIV.
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
SPIE, 2017.

Abstract

Funding: UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council under grant EP/J01771X/1 (KD), the 'BRAINS' 600th anniversary appeal, and Dr. E. Killick; The Northwood Trust and The RS Macdonald Charitable Trust (JAT); Royal Society Leverhulme Trust Senior Fellowship (KD). Light-sheet microscopy (LSM) has received great interest for fluorescent imaging applications in biomedicine as it facilitates three-dimensional visualisation of large sample volumes with high spatiotemporal resolution whilst minimising irradiation of, and photo-damage to the specimen. Despite these advantages, LSM can only visualize superficial layers of turbid tissues, such as mammalian neural tissue. Propagation-invariant light modes have played a key role in the development of high-resolution LSM techniques as they overcome the natural divergence of a Gaussian beam, enabling uniform and thin light-sheets over large distances. Most notably, Bessel and Airy beam-based light-sheet imaging modalities have been demonstrated. In the single-photon excitation regime and in lightly scattering specimens, Airy-LSM has given competitive performance with advanced Bessel-LSM techniques. Airy and Bessel beams share the property of self-healing, the ability of the beam to regenerate its transverse beam profile after propagation around an obstacle. Bessel-LSM techniques have been shown to increase the penetration-depth of the illumination into turbid specimens but this effect has been understudied in biologically relevant tissues, particularly for Airy beams. It is expected that Airy-LSM will give a similar enhancement over Gaussian-LSM. In this paper, we report on the comparison of Airy-LSM and Gaussian-LSM imaging modalities within cleared and non-cleared mouse brain tissue. In particular, we examine image quality versus tissue depth by quantitative spatial Fourier analysis of neural structures in virally transduced fluorescent tissue sections, showing a three-fold enhancement at 50 μm depth into non-cleared tissue with Airy-LSM. Complimentary analysis is performed by resolution measurements in bead-injected tissue sections. Publisher PDF

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Three-Dimensional and Multidimensional Microscopy: Image Acquisition and Processing XXIV
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a8091fdfe9d228bca936c1f907c45292
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2251921