| Literature DB >> 32117249 |
Nathaniel H Allan-Rahill1, Michael R E Lamont1, William M Chilian2, Nozomi Nishimura1, David M Small1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of worldwide mortality. Intravital microscopy has provided unprecedented insight into leukocyte biology by enabling the visualization of dynamic responses within living organ systems at the cell-scale. The heart presents a uniquely dynamic microenvironment driven by periodic, synchronous electrical conduction leading to rhythmic contractions of cardiomyocytes, and phasic coronary blood flow. In addition to functions shared throughout the body, immune cells have specific functions in the heart including tissue-resident macrophage-facilitated electrical conduction and rapid monocyte infiltration upon injury. Leukocyte responses to cardiac pathologies, including myocardial infarction and heart failure, have been well-studied using standard techniques, however, certain questions related to spatiotemporal relationships remain unanswered. Intravital imaging techniques could greatly benefit our understanding of the complexities of in vivo leukocyte behavior within cardiac tissue, but these techniques have been challenging to apply. Different approaches have been developed including high frame rate imaging of the beating heart, explantation models, micro-endoscopy, and mechanical stabilization coupled with various acquisition schemes to overcome challenges specific to the heart. The field of cardiac science has only begun to benefit from intravital microscopy techniques. The current focused review presents an overview of leukocyte responses in the heart, recent developments in intravital microscopy for the murine heart, and a discussion of future developments and applications for cardiovascular immunology.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular; heart; intravital microscopy; leukocyte; multiphoton microscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32117249 PMCID: PMC7010807 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Surgical and stabilization approaches in the heart.
| Heterotopic heart explantation | • Right cervical or abdominal transplantation of donor heart with circulatory integration | • Stabilization chamber | • Investigating graft and host cell interactions | • Abnormal hemodynamics, low temporal resolution | ( |
| Micro-endoscopy | • 2–3 mm intercostal incision | • Suction probe | • Reduced motion artifact | • Reduced lateral and axial resolution due to GRIN lens | ( |
| Passive stabilization | • Left thoracotomy | • 3D-printed or machined circular probe with tissue adhesive | • High spatial and temporal resolution | • Motion artifact limits visualization of single-cycle dynamics | ( |
Matsuura et al. (.
Imaging and reconstruction approaches in the intravital heart.
| Image gating | • Laser scanning microscopy | • High spatial and temporal resolution | • External control of cardiac and respiratory cycles may induce abnormalities | ( |
| Free running | • Laser scanning microscopy | • Capture fast dynamic events | • Motion artifact limits quantification of beat-to-beat dynamics | ( |
| Cardiorespiratory reconstruction | • Laser scanning microscopy | • High spatial and temporal resolution | • Inability to visualize beat-to-beat dynamics | ( |
Figure 1Surgical approaches for intravital microscopy of the beating mouse heart. (A) The cervical explanted heart model provides the benefits of studying cardiac graft vs. host interaction [image adapted from Li et al. (66) with permission]. (B) Endoscopic, suction-stabilized imaging provides a less invasive approach and enables time-lapse imaging that reduces motion and appears to leave major histocompatibility complex class-II (MHC-II) + immune cell numbers unchanged [image reproduced from Jung et al. (33) with permission]. (C) Intrathoracic approaches enable a wider field of view of the freely beating heart in mechanically ventilated animals. Optical access to the heart is gained by a left thoracotomy in the anesthetized mouse. (D) Passive tissue stabilization is achieved by a 3D printed stainless steel probe (left) with a coverglass and reservoir for water immersion of the microscope objective. Tissue adhesive is applied to the underside of the stabilization probe prior to attachment to the left ventricle. Photographs show the probe attached to the heart (top right) and a view of the heart surface with visible coronary vessels in the window (bottom right). Image adapted from Jones et al. (78).
Figure 2Image acquisition and reconstruction techniques for the beating mouse heart in vivo. (A) Heart structure is relatively stable during diastole allowing acquisition of full image frames with no motion artifact [image adapted from Lee et al. (70) with permission]. (B–F) Line-by-line reconstruction enables volumetric reconstructions at any point within the cardiac or respiratory cycles. (B) Simultaneous recording of the electrocardiogram (ECG) and lung pressure during imaging produces image frames at a single Z-plane that are captured at various points in the cardiac and respiratory cycles. The R-wave peak of the ECG (red arrows) and inspiratory peak of the lung pressure (blue arrows) are defined as the start and end of the cardiac cycle and respiratory cycle, respectively. (C) Each 512 × 512 pixel image frame is produced by raster scanning the excitation laser in the X-direction, therefore each line has a defined position in Y, a depth in Z, and a time it was captured with respect to the cardiac cycle (cardiac time) and respiratory cycle (respiratory time). (D) Each Y, Z line in the image is associated with a phase in the cardiac and respiratory cycles (yellow spots). An image volume is reconstructed using image lines for each Y, Z position that occur at a specified part of respiratory and cardiac cycles (green shaded box). (E) The closest Y, Z position (green circle) to a requested point in cardio-respiratory phase space that is absent (red cross) can be used to completely fill a three-dimensional volume. (F) Reconstructed vasculature of the beating mouse heart during diastole. Vasculature is fluorescently labeled with a Texas Red dye conjugated to a 70 kDa dextran. Scale bar in A represents 20 μm.
Figure 3Leukocyte dynamics in the mouse heart using intravital multiphoton microscopy. (A) Intravital multiphoton imaging of explanted heart tissue after heterotopic cardiac transplantation into LysM+/GFP mice shows neutrophil (green) infiltration from the host through vasculature labeled with non-targeted 655 nm Q-dots in red [image adapted from Li et al. (66) with permission]. Time stamp is h:min:s and scale bar is 60 μm (top) and 20 μm (bottom). (B) Intravital multiphoton microscopy with cardiorespiratory-dependent image reconstruction of Cx3Cr1+/GFP mice hearts enables visualization of acute morphological changes of resident cardiac macrophages (green) in response to focal, laser-irradiation injury (yellow cross-hairs) over 1 h. Images are perspective Z-projections over 50 μm in depth and insets are single Z-slice of the region outlined in yellow, from 80% of the cardiac cycle and 50% of the respiratory cycle. (C) Intravital imaging shows increased number of macrophages in the heart following myocardial infarction compared to baseline. Vasculature is fluorescently labeled with Texas Red dextran (B–D, magenta). (D) Free-running intravital multiphoton microscopy captures intravascular rolling (red arrow) and crawling (yellow arrow) behavior of leukocytes labeled with rhodamine-6G (cyan) within vessels (magenta, Texas Red dextran). (B–D) Scale bars represent 50 μm, except insets in (B) that are 20 μm. Images captured with an Olympus XLPlan N 25 × 1.05 NA objective. All animal procedures were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of Cornell University.