Literature DB >> 23117810

Ex vivo optical metabolic measurements from cultured tissue reflect in vivo tissue status.

Alex J Walsh1, Kristin M Poole, Craig L Duvall, Melissa C Skala.   

Abstract

Optical measurements of metabolism are ideally acquired in vivo; however, intravital measurements are often impractical. Accurate ex vivo assessments would greatly broaden the applicability of optical measurements of metabolism. We investigate the use of live tissue culture experiments to serve as a surrogate for in vivo metabolic measurements. To validate this approach, NADH and FAD fluorescence intensity and lifetime images were acquired with a two-photon microscope from hamster cheek pouch epithelia in vivo, from biopsies maintained in live tissue culture up to 48 h, and from flash-frozen and thawed biopsies. We found that the optical redox ratio (fluorescence intensity of NADH/FAD) of the cultured biopsy was statistically identical to the in vivo measurement until 24 h, while the redox ratio of the frozen-thawed samples decreased by 15% (p<0.01). The NADH mean fluorescence lifetime (τm) remained unchanged (p>0.05) during the first 8 h of tissue culture, while the NADH τm of frozen-thawed samples increased by 13% (p<0.001). Cellular morphology did not significantly change between in vivo, cultured, and frozen-thawed tissues (p>0.05). All results were consistent across multiple depth layers in this stratified squamous epithelial tissue. Histological markers for proliferation and apoptosis also confirm the viability of tissues maintained in culture. This study suggests that short-term ex vivo tissue culture may be more appropriate than frozen-thawed tissue for optical metabolic and morphologic measurements that approximate in vivo status.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23117810      PMCID: PMC3484268          DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.17.11.116015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomed Opt        ISSN: 1083-3668            Impact factor:   3.170


  40 in total

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10.  Fluorescence lifetime imaging of endogenous fluorophores in histopathology sections reveals differences between normal and tumor epithelium in carcinoma in situ of the breast.

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  22 in total

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4.  Temporal binning of time-correlated single photon counting data improves exponential decay fits and imaging speed.

Authors:  Alex J Walsh; Joe T Sharick; Melissa C Skala; Hope T Beier
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5.  Optical metabolic imaging quantifies heterogeneous cell populations.

Authors:  Alex J Walsh; Melissa C Skala
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6.  Autofluorescence imaging identifies tumor cell-cycle status on a single-cell level.

Authors:  Tiffany M Heaster; Alex J Walsh; Yue Zhao; Scott W Hiebert; Melissa C Skala
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7.  Label-free redox imaging of patient-derived organoids using selective plane illumination microscopy.

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9.  Modulation of redox metabolism negates cancer-associated fibroblasts-induced treatment resistance in a heterotypic 3D culture platform of pancreatic cancer.

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10.  Optical metabolic imaging identifies glycolytic levels, subtypes, and early-treatment response in breast cancer.

Authors:  Alex J Walsh; Rebecca S Cook; H Charles Manning; Donna J Hicks; Alec Lafontant; Carlos L Arteaga; Melissa C Skala
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2013-10-15       Impact factor: 12.701

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