Synergistic Strategy for Multicolor Two-photon Microscopy: Application to the Analysis of Germinal Center Reactions In Vivo.
Asylkhan RakhymzhanRuth LebenHanna ZimmermannRobert GüntherPeggy MexDavid ReismannCarolin UlbrichtAndreas AcsAlexander U BrandtRandall L LindquistThomas H WinklerAnja E HauserRaluca A NiesnerPublished in: Scientific reports (2017)
Simultaneous detection of multiple cellular and molecular players in their native environment, one of the keys to a full understanding of immune processes, remains challenging for in vivo microscopy. Here, we present a synergistic strategy for spectrally multiplexed in vivo imaging composed of (i) triple two-photon excitation using spatiotemporal synchronization of two femtosecond lasers, (ii) a broad set of fluorophores with emission ranging from blue to near infrared, (iii) an effective spectral unmixing algorithm. Using our approach, we simultaneously excite and detect seven fluorophores expressed in distinct cellular and tissue compartments, plus second harmonics generation from collagen fibers in lymph nodes. This enables us to visualize the dynamic interplay of all the central cellular players during germinal center reactions. While current in vivo imaging typically enables recording the dynamics of 4 tissue components at a time, our strategy allows a more comprehensive analysis of cellular dynamics involving 8 single-labeled compartments. It enables to investigate the orchestration of multiple cellular subsets determining tissue function, thus, opening the way for a mechanistic understanding of complex pathophysiologic processes in vivo. In the future, the design of transgenic mice combining a larger spectrum of fluorescent proteins will reveal the full potential of our method.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- lymph node
- label free
- single molecule
- living cells
- optical coherence tomography
- machine learning
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single cell
- high throughput
- computed tomography
- early stage
- high speed
- magnetic resonance
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- pet imaging
- positron emission tomography
- wound healing
- solid state
- monte carlo