| Literature DB >> 21412473 |
O D Therrien, B Aubé, S Pagès, P De Koninck, D Côté.
Abstract
Wide-field temporal focusing is a novel technique that provides optical sectioning for imaging without the need for beam scanning. However, illuminating over large areas greatly reduces the photon density which limits the technique applicability to small regions, precluding functional imaging of cellular networks. Here we present a strategy that combines beam shaping and temporal focusing of amplified pulses (>1 µJ/pulse) for fast imaging of cells from the central nervous system in acute slices. Multiphoton video-rate imaging over total areas as wide as 4800 µm(2) with an optical sectioning under 10 µm at 800 nm is achieved with our setup, leading to imaging of calcium dynamics of multiple cells simultaneously in thick tissue.Entities:
Keywords: (070.6120) Spatial light modulators; (170.2655) Functional monitoring and imaging; (180.4315) Nonlinear microscopy; (320.5540) Pulse shaping
Year: 2011 PMID: 21412473 PMCID: PMC3047373 DOI: 10.1364/BOE.2.000696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Opt Express ISSN: 2156-7085 Impact factor: 3.732
Fig. 1.(a) Microscopy Setup. HWP: half-wave plate, PC: polarizer cube, S: camera-controlled shutter, T: telescope comprised of two achromatic lenses (f = −75 mm and +125 mm), SLM: spatial light modulator, FP: Fourier plane, F: Fourier achromatic lens (f = 300 mm), DG: diffractive grating, IP: image plane, F: achromatic lens for collimating the diffracted beam (f = 300 mm), Hg: mercury arc lamp, M1: Flip mirror, DM: excitation-detection dichroic filters, O: microscope objective, CCD: EMCCD camera. (b) Fluorescence intensity of a thin layer of fluorescein scanned through the focal plane with and without TF by replacing the DG by a mirror. (c) Fluorescence of live cultured cells loaded with Fluo-4 AM calcium indicator. (Green) Wide-field mercury arc lamp excitation (λ = 450 nm, λ = 525 nm longpass), (Dashed line) targeted illumination, (Red) TF patterned illumination (λ = 800 nm, λ = 535/40 nm). All scale bars are 20 µm.
Fig. 2.Comparison between one-photon and TF imaging of astrocytes in 80 µm spinal cord slice immunolabeled for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), revealed with AlexaFluo 594 secondary antibody. (a) Image of a single optical plane at 55 µm depth by one-photon (left, λ = 450 nm, λ = 650/50 nm) and TF (right, λ = 800 nm, λ = 650/50 nm) illumination. Total field-of-view is 4200 µm2. (b) Orthogonal view along the dashed line in (a) from a z-stack comprised of 15 images separated by 5 µm for one-photon (left) and TF (right) illumination. The axial reconstruction is done by FIJI software Volume Viewer plugin and with the Volume II interpolation to ensure continuity between imaging planes. The use of TF allows one to reduce the out-of-focus background. All scale bars are 20 µm.
Fig. 3.Comparison between one-photon and TF functional imaging in brain slice from two independent spontaneous activity measurements. Fluorescence from Fluo-4 AM calcium indicator loaded in a P8 300 µm rat hippocampal slice. (a) one-photon wide-field imaging. (b) Wide-field TF imaging of the same region with patterned illumination. Three square subregions were selected for illumination using the SLM. (c) Fluorescence fluctuations (ΔF/F) corresponding to intracellular free calcium elevation revealed by one-photon wide-field (left) and by TF patterned illumination (right). (d) Mean (± SEM) (ΔF/F) amplitudes from 4 cells for each imaging condition. Statistical test is Mann-Whitney and the difference between means is significant (p = 0.0286). Scale bars in (a) and (b) are 20 µm.