| Literature DB >> 33043767 |
Artur Hahn1,2, Julia Bode3, Allen Alexander1,4, Kianush Karimian-Jazi1, Katharina Schregel1, Daniel Schwarz1, Alexander C Sommerkamp3,5, Thomas Krüwel3, Amir Abdollahi6,7,8, Wolfgang Wick9,10, Michael Platten4,11, Martin Bendszus1, Björn Tews3, Felix T Kurz1, Michael O Breckwoldt1,4.
Abstract
Three-dimensional assessment of optically cleared, entire organs and organisms has recently become possible by tissue clearing and selective plane illumination microscopy ("ultramicroscopy"). Resulting datasets can be highly complex, encompass over a thousand images with millions of objects and data of several gigabytes per acquisition. This constitutes a major challenge for quantitative analysis. We have developed post-processing tools to quantify millions of microvessels and their distribution in three-dimensional datasets from ultramicroscopy and demonstrate the capabilities of our pipeline within entire mouse brains and embryos. Using our developed acquisition, segmentation, and analysis platform, we quantify physiological vascular networks in development and the healthy brain. We compare various geometric vessel parameters (e.g. vessel density, radius, tortuosity) in the embryonic spinal cord and brain as well as in different brain regions (basal ganglia, corpus callosum, cortex). White matter tract structures (corpus callosum, spinal cord) showed lower microvascular branch densities and longer vessel branch length compared to grey matter (cortex, basal ganglia). Furthermore, we assess tumor neoangiogenesis in a mouse glioma model to compare tumor core and tumor border. The developed methodology allows rapid quantification of three-dimensional datasets by semi-automated segmentation of fluorescently labeled objects with conventional computer hardware. Our approach can aid preclinical investigations and paves the way towards "quantitative ultramicroscopy".Entities:
Keywords: Ultramicroscopy; angiogenesis; clearing; microvascular networks; selective plane illumination microscopy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33043767 PMCID: PMC8217891 DOI: 10.1177/0271678X20961854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ISSN: 0271-678X Impact factor: 6.200
Figure 1.Ultramicroscopy of the microvasculature in healthy mice. (a) Experimental outline for tissue preparation and SPIM. Healthy, female black six wild-type mice were injected intravenously with fluorescent lectins to label the microvasculature before perfusion. (b) Ultramicroscopic image processing and three-dimensional view of the analyzed regions of interest in the healthy mouse brain, magnified images (dashed boxes) of cortex, basal ganglia, and corpus callosum. Yellow dashed lines indicate the segmented subregions. (c) Images of the acquired z-stack. Step size is 5 µm. The entire stacks consisted of ∼600–1000 single-plane images. Scale bar = 500 µm and 100 µm in magnified images in B.
Figure 2.Microvascular parameters in the healthy mouse brain. (a) Histograms show quantification results from ultramicroscopic images and demonstrate significant differences between the indicated vessel parameters in different regions of the healthy brain. (b) Whisker plots demonstrate vessel parameters of different regions in the healthy brain (median with 50% quantile and extremal values (whiskers) from n = 3 mice for six analyzed brain hemispheres. * =p<0.05.
C: cortex; Cc: corpus callosum; BG: basal ganglia.
Figure 3.Microvasculature remodeling in the U87 glioma model. (a) Ultramicroscopic image processing and three-dimensional view of region of interest in mouse U87 glioma tumors. Yellow dashed line indicates the segmented tumor area. (b) Histogram representation of quantified vessel parameters showing tumor core and tumor periphery. (c) Whisker plots are shown for the obtained parameters of U87 mouse tumors (n = 6 mice). Scale bar = 500 µm.
Figure 4.Assessing microvascular parameters in development. (a) Ultramicroscopic image processing and three-dimensional view of the brain and spinal cord in the mouse embryo (e13.5). Yellow boxes indicate magnified regions (brain and spinal cord). (b) Histogram representations of the quantified ultramicroscopic images demonstrate significant differences in vessel parameters between brain and spinal cord. (c) Whisker plots show parameter statistics for the spinal cord and brain microvasculature (n = 4 embryos). Scale bar is 500 µm in embryo images, 250 µm in magnified brain images, and 100 µm in magnified spinal cord images. * = p<0.05.