Nanoscopic Imaging of Human Tissue Sections via Physical and Isotropic Expansion

被引:3
|
作者
Klimas, Aleksandra [1 ]
Bucur, Octavian [2 ]
Njeri, Brigdet [1 ]
Zhao, Yongxin [1 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[2] QPathology, Boston, MA USA
来源
基金
美国安德鲁·梅隆基金会;
关键词
Medicine; Issue; 151; expansion microscopy; fluorescence microscopy; nanoscale imaging; super-resolution imaging; pathology; expansion pathology; immunohistochemistry; MICROSCOPY;
D O I
10.3791/60195
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
In modern pathology, optical microscopy plays an important role in disease diagnosis by revealing microscopic structures of clinical specimens. However, the fundamental physical diffraction limit prevents interrogation of nanoscale anatomy and subtle pathological changes when using conventional optical imaging approaches. Here, we describe a simple and inexpensive protocol, called expansion pathology (ExPath), for nanoscale optical imaging of common types of clinical primary tissue specimens, including both fixed-frozen or formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue sections. This method circumvents the optical diffraction limit by chemically transforming the tissue samples into tissue-hydrogel hybrid and physically expanding them isotropically across multiple scales in pure water. Due to expansion, previously unresolvable molecules are separated and thus can be observed using a conventional optical microscope.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Automated TUNEL assay on tissue sections via robotics
    Biswas, Sabyasachi
    Yaylaoglu, Murat B.
    Safra, Noa
    Arceo, Rommel
    Taylor, Robin E.
    Eastham-Anderson, Jeffrey
    Foreman, Oded
    JOURNAL OF HISTOTECHNOLOGY, 2016, 39 (02) : 53 - 58
  • [32] Isotropic expansion of external environment induces tissue elongation and collective cell alignment
    Koyama, Hiroshi
    Fujimori, Toshihiko
    JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 2020, 496
  • [33] Atomic Resolution Imaging of Currents in Nanoscopic Quantum Networks via Scanning Tunneling Microscopy
    Can, Tankut
    Morr, Dirk K.
    PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2013, 110 (08)
  • [34] A comparison of Raman, FTIR and ATR-FTIR micro spectroscopy for imaging human skin tissue sections
    Ali, S. M.
    Bonnier, F.
    Lambkin, H.
    Flynn, K.
    McDonagh, V.
    Healy, C.
    Lee, T. C.
    Lyng, F. M.
    Byrne, H. J.
    ANALYTICAL METHODS, 2013, 5 (09) : 2281 - 2291
  • [35] On the spectral constitutive modelling of transversely isotropic soft tissue: Physical invariants
    Shariff, M. H. B. M.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING SCIENCE, 2017, 120 : 199 - 219
  • [36] ELEMENTAL DISTRIBUTIONS OF FREEZE-SUBSTITUTED CALCIFYING TISSUE-SECTIONS BY EELS-IMAGING TISSUE-SECTIONS
    MIZUHIRA, V
    OZAWA, H
    EJIRI, S
    JOURNAL OF ELECTRON MICROSCOPY, 1988, 37 (05): : 253 - 253
  • [37] Molecular imaging of thin mammalian tissue sections by mass spectrometry
    Chaurand, Pierre
    Cornett, D. Shannon
    Caprioli, Richard M.
    CURRENT OPINION IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2006, 17 (04) : 431 - 436
  • [38] Quantitative imaging of tissue sections using infrared scanning technology
    Eaton, Samantha L.
    Cumyn, Elizabeth
    King, Declan
    Kline, Rachel A.
    Carpanini, Sarah M.
    Del-Pozo, Jorge
    Barron, Rona
    Wishart, Thomas M.
    JOURNAL OF ANATOMY, 2016, 228 (01) : 203 - 213
  • [39] ACOUSTIC IMAGING OF INDUCED THERMAL EXPANSION OF BIOLOGICAL TISSUE
    SU, JL
    LIN, JC
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 1985, 32 (10) : 886 - 886
  • [40] Research imaging cytometer as an instrument for studying endometrial tissue sections
    Palyi-Krekk, Z.
    Barok, M.
    Tammi, M.
    Isola, J.
    Vereb, G.
    Nagy, P.
    Szoelloesi, J.
    CYTOMETRY PART A, 2007, 71A (07) : 527 - 527