| Literature DB >> 27239813 |
Jinyoung Seo1, Minjin Choe2, Sung-Yon Kim1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Clearing and labeling techniques for large-scale biological tissues enable simultaneous extraction of molecular and structural information with minimal disassembly of the sample, facilitating the integration of molecular, cellular and systems biology across different scales. Recent years have witnessed an explosive increase in the number of such methods and their applications, reflecting heightened interest in organ-wide clearing and labeling across many fields of biology and medicine. In this review, we provide an overview and comparison of existing clearing and labeling techniques and discuss challenges and opportunities in the investigations of large-scale biological systems.Entities:
Keywords: 3D volume imaging; CLARITY; SWITCH; large-scale tissue clearing; stochastic electrotransport; whole-mount labeling
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27239813 PMCID: PMC4916395 DOI: 10.14348/molcells.2016.0088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cells ISSN: 1016-8478 Impact factor: 5.034
Fig. 1.Tissue clearing techniques. (A) Light scattering in biological tissues can be reduced by removal of lipid and RI matching. (B) Simple immersion in a high-RI aqueous solution renders the tissue modestly transparent by homogenizing scattering throughout the sample. (C) Delipidation and dehydration/hyperhydration followed by refractive index matching. (Top) For solvent-based clearing, the tissue is incubated in dehydrating solvent for delipidation and dehydration, and is moved to a high-RI clearing solvent where RI matching and additional delipidation occur. (Bottom) The sample is placed in an aqueous solution that contains high concentration of non-ionic detergent and denaturant, where delipidation, hyperhydration, and RI matching take place. (D) A biological sample is first transformed into a tissue-gel hybrid by hydrogel embedding (Top) or glutaraldehyde fixation (Bottom), where the gel network increases the tissue integrity. The tissue-gel hybrid then can withstand extensive delipidation by incubation in ionic detergent (SDS) assisted by electrophoresis or heating.
Comparison of tissue clearing methods. General properties and performances of major published clearing methods. The methods are categorized according to the main mode of action: RI matching by simple immersion, organic solvent-based clearing (dehydration, delipidation, RI matching), aqueous solution-based clearing (hyperhdyration, delipidation, RI matching), and tissue-gel hybridization.
| Reagents | Clearing properties | Labeling properties | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Technique | Main clearing reagent | Detergent | Gel | Final RI | Clearing capability | Tissue scale | Clearing time | FP signal | Lipid preserved | Tissue integrity | IHC | RNA | # Ab tested | Reference |
| RI matching by simple immersion: aqueous-based clearing | ||||||||||||||
| ClearT | 95% formamide | - | - | 1.44 | Medium | Young adult mouse brain | 2–3 days | - | + | No change | Yes (small) | - | - | |
| ClearT2 | 50% formamide, 20% PEG | - | - | 1.44 | Medium | Young adult mouse brain | 2–3 days | ++ | + | Yes (small) | - | 2 | ||
| SeeDB | 80.2% fructose, 0.5% thioglycerol | - | - | 1.48 | Weak | Young adult mouse brain | Several days | ++ | ++ | Yes (small) | - | 1 | ||
| Dehydration, delipidation and RI matching: solvent-based clearing | ||||||||||||||
| BABB | BABB | - | - | 1.55 | Strong | Adult mouse brain | 2–3 days | + (half day) | - | Shrinkage; hard and brittle | Yes (small) | - | - | |
| 3DISCO | DBE, DCM | - | - | 1.56 | Very strong | Young adult mouse brain | 1–3 days | + (1–2 days) | - | Yes (limited) | - | - | ||
| iDISCO | DBE, DCM | - | - | 1.56 | Very strong | Adult mouse brain | 1–3 days | + (2–4 days) | - | Yes (large) | - | 28 | ||
| Hyperhydration, delipidation and RI matching: aqueous-based clearing | ||||||||||||||
| Sca | 4M urea, 10% glycerol | 0.1% TX-100 | - | 1.38 | Medium | Adult mouse brain | 2 weeks | ++ | - | Expansion; soft and fragile | No | - | - | |
| Sca | 4M urea, sorbitol | 0.2% TX-100 | - | 1.44 | Strong | Old mouse brain | Several days | ++ | + | No change; firm and sectionable | Yes (limited | - | 5 | |
| CUBIC | 4M urea, aminoalcohols | 15% or 0.1% TX-100 | - | 1.38 or 1.48 | Very strong | Neonatal marmoset brain | 1–2 weeks | - | Expansion | Yes (small) | - | 3 | ||
| CUBIC-Perfusion | 4M urea, aminoalcohols | 15% or 0.1% TX-100 | - | 1.38 | Very strong | Adult mouse | 2 weeks (whole body) | ++ | - | Yes (small) | - | 2 | ||
| Tissue-gel hybridization followed by delipidation and RI matching | ||||||||||||||
| Electrophoresis-assisted delipidation | ||||||||||||||
| CLARITY | SDS, FocusClear | 4% SDS | A4P4 B0.05 or A0.5P4 B0.0125 | 1.45 | Very strong | Adult mouse brain; 500-μm-thick post-mortem human brain | 2–4 weeks | ++ | - | Minimal expansion | Yes (large); multi-round (≤ 3) | ISH (small | 11 | |
| SE-CLARITY | SDS, custom RI matching solution | 200 mM SDS | A4P4 | 1.46 | Very strong | Adult mouse brain | 1–3 days | ++ | - | Yes (large) | Not tested | 3 | ||
| ACT-PRESTO | SDS, RIMS* (or CUBIC-mount) | 4% SDS | A4P0 | 1.43–1.48 | Very strong | Adult rabbit brain (modest transparency) | 2–3 days | ++ | - | Yes (large) | ISH | 75 | ||
| Passive delipidation | ||||||||||||||
| PACT | SDS, RIMS | 8% SDS | A4P0 | 1.38–1.48 | Very strong | Adult mouse brain and whole-body | ≥1 month | ++ | - | Minimal expansion | Yes (large) | smFISH (small | 8 | |
| PARS | SDS, RIMS | 8% SDS | A4P0 | 1.38–1.48 | Very strong | 1–2 weeks | ++ | - | Yes (large) | Not tested | 6 | |||
| EDC-CLARITY | SDS, Focus-Clear | A4P4B0.0 4% SDS A4P0; 0.1 | 5 or M EDC | 1.45 | Very strong | Adult mouse brain | 2–4 weeks | ++ | - | Shrinkage (during hybridization and stringency wash) | Not tested | Multiplexed ISH using DNA-based amplification (large | - | |
| GA fixation followed by thermal delipidation | ||||||||||||||
| SWITCH | SDS, custom RI matching solution | 200 mM SDS | G1P4; pH 3 4% GA, pH 7 1% GA | 1.47 | Very strong (mild browning) | Adult rat and young marmoset brains | 4 days–2 weeks | - | + | Minimal expansion; hardened | Yes (large); multi-round (> 20) | - | 86 | |
The largest brain tissue used in the original studies.
Time required for clearing a whole mouse brain or hemisphere (not including staining).
++, FP signal retained for more than a week; +, FP signal retained for less than a week; -, FP signal not preserved.
Qualitative evaluations based on recent comparative experiments (Economo et al., 2016; Hama et al., 2015).
‘Large’ indicates millimeter-scale samples such as whole organs. Note that immunostaining compatibility was not demonstrated in the original ScaleS paper (alternative protocol termed AbScale is required for immunostaining).
CLARITY demonstrated in situ hybridization in 500-μm brain blocks. smFISH was demonstrated in PACT-processed 100-μm brain slices. In EDC-CLARITY method, specific RNAs were detected in 2-mm block of mouse cortex by DNA-based signal amplification method (Hybridization Chain Reaction).