Uncovering microstructural architecture from histology.
Marios GeorgiadisFranca Auf der HeidenHamed AbbasiLoes EttemaJeffrey J NirschlHossein Moein TaghaviMoe WakatsukiAndy LiuWilliam Hai Dang HoMackenzie CarlsonMichail DoukasSjors A KoppesStijn KeereweerRaymond A SobelKawin SetsompopCongyu LiaoKatrin AmuntsMarkus AxerMichael ZeinehMiriam MenzelPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Microstructural tissue organization underlies the complex connectivity of the brain and controls properties of connective, muscle, and epithelial tissue. However, discerning microstructural architecture with high resolution for large fields of view remains prohibitive. We address this challenge with computational scattered light imaging (ComSLI), which exploits the anisotropic light scattering of aligned structures. Using a rotating lightsource and a high-resolution camera, ComSLI determines fiber architecture with micrometer resolution from histological sections across preparation and staining protocols. We show complex fiber architecture in brain and non-brain sections, including histological paraffin-embedded sections with various stains, and demonstrate its applicability on animal and human tissue, including disease cases with altered microstructure. ComSLI opens new avenues for investigating fiber architecture in new and archived sections across organisms, tissues, and diseases.