Deep tissue imaging remains challenging, especially for thick media, due to spherical aberrations induced on focused beams by the tissue. In this framework we propose a miniaturized in-vivo imaging window composed of high dioptric power microlenses coupled to micro-scaffold, which were fabricated by two-photon polymerization (2PP) in the biocompatible photoresist SZ2080. We adopt a single-irradiation strategy for the fabrication of the whole structure: We first irradiate the micro-scaffold on the bottom side of the chip and afterwards the microlenses on the top. For the microlenses we adopted a hybrid approach by combining the 2PP of the micro lenses surface with a subsequent UV crosslinking of the inner volume. We explored different lenses profiles (plano-convex and parabolic) with variable parameters like diameter and focal lengths, to optimize the imaging characteristics. We envisage that these imaging windows will open the way to direct and continuous optical inspection of biological processes in vivo.
In the context of biomaterials, small-molecules and drugs testing, intravital microscopy allows to quantify in-vivo the immune reaction, reducing the number of laboratory animals required to statistically validate the product. However, fluorescence microscopy is affected by limited tissue penetration due to light scattering and by optical aberrations, induced on focused beams, by the animal tissue surrounding the implant. In this framework, we developed a system of microlenses coupled to microscaffolds, both incorporated in a miniaturized imaging window. The chip is designed to act as an in-situ microscope objective with the aim to overcome the restrictions of in-vivo imaging (i.e. spherical aberrations) and to allow multiple biological observations in the same animal (by including fluorescent beacons). The device is fabricated by two-photon polymerizing a biocompatible photoresist called SZ2080. The microlenses are manufactured by the concentric polar scanning of the laser beam to realize their outer surface, followed by the UV bulk polymerization of their inner SZ2080. We preliminarily characterized the imaging capabilities of our implantable system on live cells cultured on flat substrates and 3D microscaffolds by coupling it to low magnification objectives. The microlenses optical quality is sufficient to induce non-linear excitation and collect two-photon excitation images with the same level of laser intensity and signal-to-noise ratio. Remarkably, they allow to efficiently excite the fluorescence of labelled human fibroblasts collecting high resolution magnified images. These results will open the way to the application of implanted micro-optics for the real-time and continuous in-vivo observation of complex biological processes.
Despite their key-role during the histopathological diagnosis, staining procedures are expensive and time-consuming. Label-free microscopy provides an alternative since it allows the visualization of endogenous proteins without the need of extrinsic dyes. SuperµMAPPS, a novel AI-based method, analyzes the Polarized Second Harmonic Generation signal from collagen to characterize its micro-architecture in terms of fibrils mean orientation θF and anisotropy γ, related to tumor development. After a proper validation on synthetic images, human breast cancer samples at different growth stages have been analyzed through SuperµMAPPS, highlighting its capability to detect tumorous tissue at early stages in a real clinical context.
H&E stained sections are the gold standard for disease diagnosis but, unfortunately, the staining process is time-consuming and expensive. In an effort to overcome these problems, here, we propose a virtual staining algorithm, able to predict an Hematoxylin/Eosin (H&E) image, usually exploited during clinical evaluations, starting from the autofluorescence signal of entire liver tissue sections acquired by a confocal microscope. The color and texture contents of the generated virtually stained images have been analyzed through the phasor-based approach to detect tumorous tissue and to segment relevant biological structures (accuracy>90% compared to the expert manual analysis).
We report new methods of two-photon polymerization of microlenses with high numerical aperture, large diameter and good optical quality. We characterize the aberrations of these lenses that, coupled to raster scanning optical microscopes, allow two-photon excitation imaging of cells. In-vivo non-linear imaging will be also discussed, opening the possibility to use these micro-lenses in implants for the continuous inspection of biological dynamics in vivo.
The current protocols for biocompatibility assessment of biomaterials, based on histopathology, require the sacrifice of a huge number of laboratory animals with an unsustainable ethical burden and remarkable cost. Intravital microscopy techniques can be used to study implantation outcomes in real time though with limited capabilities of quantification in longitudinal studies, mainly restricted by the light penetration and the spatial resolution in deep tissues. We present the outline and first tests of a novel chip which aims to enable longitudinal studies of the reaction to the biomaterial implant. The chip is composed of a regular reference microstructure fabricated via two-photon polymerization in the SZ2080 resist. The geometrical design and the planar raster spacing largely determine the mechanical and spectroscopic features of the microstructures. The development, in-vitro characterization and in vivo validation of the Microatlas is performed in living chicken embryos by fluorescence microscopy 3 and 4 days after the implant; the quantification of cell infiltration inside the Microatlas demonstrates its potential as novel scaffold for tissue regeneration.
We exploit two-photon laser writing to fabricate 3D biocompatible proteinaceous microstructures (∼1 to 50 𝜇m in lateral size) with tunable elasticity and photo-thermal activity in the near-infrared. Structure printing relies on the photo-crosslinking of the protein bovine serum albumin (BSA, 50 mg/mL) initiated by the Rose Bengal dye (2 mM concentration), whereas photo-thermal functionality is achieved by the dispersion of non-spherically symmetric metallic nanoparticles into the ink.
Aiming at a subsequent application of the fabricated microstructures as platforms for cell growth and stimulation, we carry out a thorough characterization of their mechanical and photo-thermal properties. Preliminary data obtained by AFM indentation have quantified the structures Young modulus in the broad 100-1000 kPa range depending on the BSA concentration. Stiffness is further characterized here by subjecting the fabricated microstructures to steady flow in a microfluidic device, and by quantifying their real-time bending by a conventional transmitted light microscope. In parallel, we focus on the optimization of the photo-thermal activity of the structures. Anisotropic gold nanoparticles, dispersed in the ink, get trapped into the structure during photo-crosslinking and lead to localized heat release upon excitation in the near-infrared. The temperature increment is rapidly (∼1 s) reached and maintained under continuous wave laser irradiation at 800 nm; the amplitude of the temperature variation is quantified as a function of the incident laser power by means of infrared thermography and is correlated to both the structure thickness and the nanoparticles concentration. The resulting spatially confined heat loads could be exploited to induce highly localized responses in cells. In this direction, proteinaceous photo-thermal microstructures can be used to physically induce the differentiation of cells (e.g. neurons or fibroblasts) in a spatially controlled manner.
Mapping flows in vivo is essential for the investigation of cardiovascular pathologies in animal models. The limitation of optical-based methods, such as space-time cross correlation, is the scattering of light by the connective and fat components and the direct wave front distortion by large inhomogeneities in the tissue. Nonlinear excitation of the sample fluorescence helps us by reducing light scattering in excitation. However, there is still a limitation on the signal-background due to the wave front distortion. We develop a diffractive optical microscope based on a single spatial light modulator (SLM) with no movable parts. We combine the correction of wave front distortions to the cross-correlation analysis of the flow dynamics. We use the SLM to shine arbitrary patterns of spots on the sample, to correct their optical aberrations, to shift the aberration corrected spot array on the sample for the collection of fluorescence images, and to measure flow velocities from the cross-correlation functions computed between couples of spots. The setup and the algorithms are tested on various microfluidic devices. By applying the adaptive optics correction algorithm, it is possible to increase up to 5 times the signal-to-background ratio and to reduce approximately of the same ratio the uncertainty of the flow speed measurement. By working on grids of spots, we can correct different aberrations in different portions of the field of view, a feature that allows for anisoplanatic aberrations correction. Finally, being more efficient in the excitation, we increase the accuracy of the speed measurement by employing a larger number of spots in the grid despite the fact that the two-photon excitation efficiency scales as the fourth power of this number: we achieve a twofold decrease of the uncertainty and a threefold increase of the accuracy in the evaluation of the flow speed.
Microcirculation plays a key role in the maintenance and hemodynamics of tissues and organs also due to its extensive interaction with the immune system. A critical limitation of state-of-the-art clinical techniques to characterize the blood flow is their lack of the spatial resolution required to scale down to individual capillaries. On the other hand the study of the blood flow through auto- or cross-correlation methods fail to correlate the flow speed values with the morphological details required to describe an intricate network of capillaries. Here we propose to use a newly developed technique (FLICS, FLow Image Correlation Spectroscopy) that, by employing a single raster-scanned xy-image acquired in vivo by confocal or multi-photon excitation fluorescence microscopy, allows the quantitative measurement of the blood flow velocity in the whole vessel pattern within the field of view, while simultaneously maintaining the morphological information on the immobile structures of the explored circulatory system. Fluorescent flowing objects produce diagonal lines in the raster-scanned image superimposed to static morphological details. The flow velocity is obtained by computing the Cross Correlation Function (CCF) of the intensity fluctuations detected in pairs of columns of the image. The whole analytical dependence of the CCFs on the flow speed amplitude and the flow direction has been reported recently. We report here the derivation of approximated analytical relations that allows to use the CCF peak lag time and the corresponding CCF value, to directly estimate the flow speed amplitude and the flow direction. The validation has been performed on Zebrafish embryos for which the flow direction was changed systematically by rotating the embryos on the microscope stage. The results indicate that also from the CCF peak lag time it is possible to recover the flow speed amplitude within 13% of uncertainty (overestimation) in a wide range of angles between the flow and the image scanning direction.
We have previously addressed experimentally blood fluidodynamics in microcapillaries by coupling optical microscopy to pixelated detection. By computing the Cross-Correlation Function (CCF) of signals coming from pixels at a distance along the flow we obtained information on the flow speed and direction. The extension of these experiments to more complex systems with high branching of capillaries and/or inverted flows needs a theoretical investigation that we present here. We focus first on straight capillaries and harmonic flows between a minimum Vmin ≠ 0 and a maximum Vmax flow speed. The CCF shows multiple peaks at lag times that correspond closely to the maximum and minimum flow speeds. The general analytical expression of the CCF is given, the position of its maxima are discussed by means of geometrical considerations and numerical analysis and an experimental validation are presented. The second case that we study is the flow in the branches of a y-shaped junction in a microcapillary. By simply modeling the branching in laminar flow (low Reynold numbers) and assuming a smooth transition of speeds along the branches we derive a simple numerical model to compute the trajectories of micro-beads. We estimate the flow speed in the branches by computing the CCFs between linear regions of interest set perpendicular to the axes of the branches.
Biomedical issues in vasculogenesis and cardiogenesis require methods to follow hemodynamics with high spatial (micrometers) and time (milliseconds) resolution. At the same time, we need to follow relevant morphogenetic processes on large fields of view. Fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy coupled to scanning or wide-field microscopy meets these needs but has limited flexibility in the excitation pattern. To overcome this limitation, we develop here a two-photon two-spots setup coupled to an all-reflective near-infrared (NIR) optimized scanning system and to an electron multiplying charge-coupled device. Two NIR laser spots are spaced at adjustable micron-size distances (1 to 50 μm) by means of a Twyman-Green interferometer and repeatedly scanned on the sample, allowing acquisition of information on flows at 4 ms–3 μm time-space resolution in parallel on an extended field of view. We analyze the effect of nonhomogeneous and variable flow on the cross-correlation function by numerical simulations and show exemplary application of this setup in studies of blood flow in zebrafish embryos in vivo. By coupling the interferometer with the scanning mirrors and by computing the cross-correlation function of fluorescent red blood cells, we are able to map speed patterns in embryos’ vessels.
The vascular system of Zebrafish embryos is studied by means of Fluorescence Correlation and Image Correlation Spectroscopy. The long term project addresses biologically relevant issues concerning vasculogenesis and cardiogenesis and in particular mechanical interaction between blood flow and endothelial cells. To this purpose we use Zebrafish as a model system since the transparency of its embryos facilitates morphological observation of internal organs in-vivo. The correlation analysis provides quantitative characterization of fluxes in blood vessels in vivo. We have pursued and compared two complementary routes. In a first one we developed a two-spots two-photon setup in which the spots are spaced at adjustable micron-size distances (1-40 μm) along a vessel and the endogenous (autofluorescence) or exogenous (dsRed transgenic erythrocytes) signal is captured with an EM-CCD and cross-correlated. In this way we are able to follow the morphology of the Zebrafish embryo, simultaneously measure the heart pulsation, the velocity of red cells and of small plasma proteins. These data are compared to those obtained by image correlations on Zebrafish vessels. The two methods allows to characterize the motion of plasma fluids and erythrocytes in healthy Zebrafish embryos to be compared in the future to pathogenic ones.
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