| Literature DB >> 27676647 |
Kayla Huemer1,2,3, Jayne M Squirrell3, Robert Swader1, Danny C LeBert4, Anna Huttenlocher5,6, Kevin W Eliceiri1,2,3.
Abstract
Zebrafish, an established model organism in developmental biology, is also a valuable tool for imaging wound healing in space and time with cellular resolution. However, long-term imaging of wound healing poses technical challenges as wound healing occurs over multiple temporal scales. The traditional strategy of larval encapsulation in agarose successfully limits sample movement but impedes larval development and tissue regrowth and is therefore not amenable to long-term imaging of wound healing. To overcome this challenge, we engineered a functionally compartmentalized device, the zebrafish Wounding and Entrapment Device for Growth and Imaging (zWEDGI), to orient larvae for high-resolution microscopy, including confocal and second harmonic generation (SHG), while allowing unrestrained tail development and regrowth. In this device, larval viability was maintained and tail regrowth was improved over embedding in agarose. The quality of tail fiber SHG images collected from larvae in the device was similar to fixed samples but provided the benefit of time lapse data collection. Furthermore, we show that this device was amenable to long-term (>24 h) confocal microscopy of the caudal fin. Finally, the zWEDGI was designed and fabricated using readily available techniques so that it can be easily modified for diverse experimental imaging protocols.Entities:
Keywords: device; live imaging; microscopy; wounding
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27676647 PMCID: PMC5312606 DOI: 10.1089/zeb.2016.1323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zebrafish ISSN: 1545-8547 Impact factor: 1.985