| Literature DB >> 33772014 |
Peng Chen1, Xun Chen1, R Glenn Hepfer1,2, Brooke J Damon1, Changcheng Shi1,3, Jenny J Yao4, Matthew C Coombs1,2, Michael J Kern5, Tong Ye6,7, Hai Yao8,9.
Abstract
Diffusion is a major molecular transport mechanism in biological systems. Quantifying direction-dependent (i.e., anisotropic) diffusion is vitally important to depicting how the three-dimensional (3D) tissue structure and composition affect the biochemical environment, and thus define tissue functions. However, a tool for noninvasively measuring the 3D anisotropic extracellular diffusion of biorelevant molecules is not yet available. Here, we present light-sheet imaging-based Fourier transform fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (LiFT-FRAP), which noninvasively determines 3D diffusion tensors of various biomolecules with diffusivities up to 51 µm2 s-1, reaching the physiological diffusivity range in most biological systems. Using cornea as an example, LiFT-FRAP reveals fundamental limitations of current invasive two-dimensional diffusion measurements, which have drawn controversial conclusions on extracellular diffusion in healthy and clinically treated tissues. Moreover, LiFT-FRAP demonstrates that tissue structural or compositional changes caused by diseases or scaffold fabrication yield direction-dependent diffusion changes. These results demonstrate LiFT-FRAP as a powerful platform technology for studying disease mechanisms, advancing clinical outcomes, and improving tissue engineering.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33772014 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22221-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919