Novel fixed z-direction (FiZD) kidney primordia and an organoid culture system for time-lapse confocal imaging.
Ulla SaarelaSaad Ullah AkramAudrey DesgrangeAleksandra Rak-RaszewskaJingdong ShanSilvia CereghiniVeli-Pekka RonkainenJanne HeikkiläIlya SkovorodkinSeppo Juhani VainioPublished in: Development (Cambridge, England) (2017)
Tissue, organ and organoid cultures provide suitable models for developmental studies, but our understanding of how the organs are assembled at the single-cell level still remains unclear. We describe here a novel fixed z-direction (FiZD) culture setup that permits high-resolution confocal imaging of organoids and embryonic tissues. In a FiZD culture a permeable membrane compresses the tissues onto a glass coverslip and the spacers adjust the thickness, enabling the tissue to grow for up to 12 days. Thus, the kidney rudiment and the organoids can adjust to the limited z-directional space and yet advance the process of kidney morphogenesis, enabling long-term time-lapse and high-resolution confocal imaging. As the data quality achieved was sufficient for computer-assisted cell segmentation and analysis, the method can be used for studying morphogenesis ex vivo at the level of the single constituent cells of a complex mammalian organogenesis model system.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- single cell
- optical coherence tomography
- mass spectrometry
- gene expression
- rna seq
- induced apoptosis
- raman spectroscopy
- stem cells
- tandem mass spectrometry
- cell therapy
- electronic health record
- high speed
- fluorescence imaging
- signaling pathway
- big data
- photodynamic therapy
- cell death
- liquid chromatography
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- artificial intelligence
- case control