| Literature DB >> 25223385 |
Stéphane Bancelin1, Carole Aimé2, Ivan Gusachenko1, Laura Kowalczuk3, Gaël Latour1, Thibaud Coradin2, Marie-Claire Schanne-Klein1.
Abstract
The quantification of collagen fibril size is a major issue for the investigation of pathological disorders associated with structural defects of the extracellular matrix. Second-harmonic generation microscopy is a powerful technique to characterize the macromolecular organization of collagen in unstained biological tissues. Nevertheless, due to the complex coherent building of this nonlinear optical signal, it has never been used to measure fibril diameter so far. Here we report absolute measurements of second-harmonic signals from isolated fibrils down to 30 nm diameter, via implementation of correlative second-harmonic-electron microscopy. Moreover, using analytical and numerical calculations, we demonstrate that the high sensitivity of this technique originates from the parallel alignment of collagen triple helices within fibrils and the subsequent constructive interferences of second-harmonic radiations. Finally, we use these absolute measurements as a calibration for ex vivo quantification of fibril diameter in the Descemet's membrane of a diabetic rat cornea.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25223385 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5920
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919