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More Views Give Better Spatial and Temporal Resolution of Whole Organisms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2016

Stephen W. Carmichael*
Affiliation:
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905

Abstract

Type
Carmichael’s Concise Review
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2016 

Light-sheet microscopy methods have recently been developed for high-speed imaging but have limitations, such as limited penetration, that limits specimen volume size. Powerful strategies have been proposed for improving resolution in light-sheet microscopy, but each has its limitations, such as increased photo-damage that restricts observation times of dynamic events. More recently Raghav Chhetri, Fernando Amat, Yinan Wan, Burkhard Höckendorf, William Lemon, and Philipp Keller have developed another strategy for resolution enhancement that is based on multiview imaging. Their method provides uniform spatial resolution in all dimensions (isotropy) and is labeled IsoView light-sheet microscopy. IsoView light-sheet microscopy rapidly images large specimens via simultaneous light-sheet illumination and fluorescence detection along four orthogonal directions. Combining these four views by means of high-throughput multiview deconvolution yields images with high resolution in all three dimensions.

The specimen is imaged along different directions, which yields different relative orientations. Whereas two views give good resolution, Chhetri et al. designed a microscope with four orthogonal arms for simultaneous light-sheet illumination and fluorescence detection. This yields a massive number of data points that require correspondingly massive computing power, yet these authors developed algorithms that decreased the computational time from months to about two days. They also designed customized objectives that provide long working distances and high numerical apertures. They provide specifics on the design of these objectives as well as detailed blueprints for the IsoView microscope.

Figure 1: IsoView whole-animal functional images of Drosophila embryos. The length of the embryos is approximately 500 μm. The two images on the left are maximum-intensity projections of deconvoluted image data of a stage 17 embryo expressing the calcium indicator GCaMP6s throughout the nervous system. The two images on the right are four-view two-color images of gastrulating embryos with labeled nuclei (His2Av-mRFP1) and membranes (Spider-GFP) using a combination of two IsoView modes.

Using this elegant instrument, Chhetri et al. demonstrated whole-animal functional imaging of fruit fly (Drosophila) embryos at a spatial resolution of about 2 μm and a temporal resolution of 2 Hz for several hours. They also obtained spatially isotropic whole-brain functional imaging in zebrafish (Danio rerio) larvae and spatially isotropic multicolor imaging of rapid cellular dynamics across fruit fly embryos.

Compared to conventional light-sheet microscopy, IsoView microscopy improves three-dimensional spatial resolution and decreases resolution anisotropy. For Drosophila embryos, scattering and aberrations are relatively strong, but resolution varies with depth. The authors performed a systematic depth-dependent analysis of the resolution improvement achieved by IsoView in this scenario (in Supplementary Figure 7 in [1]). Conventional resolution is approximately 1.8 μm laterally and 5.5 μm axially at a depth of 20 to 30 μm, whereas IsoView provides 1.1 to 1.8 μm laterally and axially. At maximum imaging depth, conventional resolution is approximately 3.0 μm laterally and 9.0 μm axially, where IsoView provides 1.3 to 2.5 μm laterally and axially.

Compared with existing high-resolution light-sheet techniques, IsoView microscopy effectively doubles the penetration depth and provides sub-second temporal resolution for specimens 400-fold larger than could previously be imaged. The functional imaging capabilities of this elegant microscope allows for the first time the ability to capture neuronal activity simultaneously throughout the entire nervous system of an intact living organism with more than 10,000 neurons. By contrast, the largest organisms that could previously be fully covered were C. elegans, which have a relatively simple nervous system with only a few hundred neurons. This is a remarkable achievement that provides enormous power to observe dynamic cellular events in whole organisms!

References

[1]Chhetri, RKet al.,Nat Methods, doi:101038/NMETH.3632, 2015.Google Scholar
[2] The author gratefully acknowledges Drs. Philipp Keller and Raghav Chhetri for reviewing this article, as well as Dr. Charles Lyman for helpful editing.Google Scholar
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Figure 1: IsoView whole-animal functional images of Drosophila embryos. The length of the embryos is approximately 500 μm. The two images on the left are maximum-intensity projections of deconvoluted image data of a stage 17 embryo expressing the calcium indicator GCaMP6s throughout the nervous system. The two images on the right are four-view two-color images of gastrulating embryos with labeled nuclei (His2Av-mRFP1) and membranes (Spider-GFP) using a combination of two IsoView modes.