High-resolution intravital imaging with enhanced contrast up to 120 µm depth in lymph nodes of adult mice is achieved by spatially modulating the excitation pattern of a multi-focal two-photon microscope. In 100 µm depth we measured resolutions of 487 nm (lateral) and 551 nm (axial), thus circumventing scattering and diffraction limits.
Monitoring cellular communication by intravital deep-tissue multi-photon microscopy is the key for understanding the fate of immune cells within thick tissue samples and organs in health and disease. By controlling the scanning pattern in multi-photon microscopy and applying appropriate numerical algorithms, we developed a striped-illumination approach, which enabled us to achieve 3-fold better axial resolution and improved signal-to-noise ratio, i.e. contrast, in more than 100 µm tissue depth within highly scattering tissue of lymphoid organs as compared to standard multi-photon microscopy. The acquisition speed as well as photobleaching and photodamage effects were similar to standard photo-multiplier-based technique, whereas the imaging depth was slightly lower due to the use of field detectors. By using the striped-illumination approach, we are able to observe the dynamics of immune complex deposits on secondary follicular dendritic cells – on the level of a few protein molecules in germinal centers.
Two-photon laser-scanning microscopy (TPLSM), with its advantages for deep-tissue imaging related to infrared ultra-short pulsed excitation1, has revolutionized our view on vital processes on a single-cell level by revealing motility and interaction patterns of various cell subsets in living animals2-5. However, current technology is still insufficient to elucidate the mechanisms of organ function and dysfunction as a prerequisite for developing new therapeutic strategies, since it renders only sparse information about the molecular basis of cellular response within tissues in health and disease. Current technology enables only a spatial window of few hundred microns due to scattering and wave front distortion effects on spatial resolution and signal-to-noise ratio6, which are particularly obvious in the highly compact tissue of adult animals. These scattering and wave front distortion effects are due to a highly heterogeneous and anisotropic distribution of the refractive index in tissue, leading in a first step to a depth dependent deterioration of 3D spatial resolution and finally to the total loss of signal originating from ballistic excitation photons, i.e. loss of signal-to-noise ratio. In terms of bioscientific and biomedical deep-tissue applications, this means that the current technology is unable to unequivocally reveal cellular communication because poor resolution would lead to falsely positive interactions whereas the decrease of signal-to-noise ratio would cause the system to overlook some interactions between dim structures.
In order to unequivocally detect cellular interactions in a dynamic way, a highly improved spatial resolution is needed deep within the tissue. The currently introduced powerful nanoscopy techniques based on special numerical algorithms, e.g. structure-illumination approaches, on depletion of the first excited state, e.g. STED, RESOLFT, or on molecule localization, e.g. dSTORM, PALM, have found many applications in fixed cells as well as in live cell cultures7. However, in order to extend these applications to tissue sections, living tissue and organisms we still need to overcome severe technical difficulties. Two-photon excitation STED with different wavelengths as well as with a single wavelength (sw2PE-STED) for excitation and stimulated emission has been applied to improve lateral resolution in brain slices8 or in artificial matrices with embedded cells9, respectively, at the same axial resolution as standard TPLSM. Using one-photon STED, the dynamics of dendritic spines could be imaged at the surface of the brain cortex (up to 10-15 µm depth) in a living Thy1 EGFP mouse at a resolution of 67 nm10. A versatile tool for developmental biology is provided by the multifocal structured-illumination microscopy, which provides two-fold improved 2D resolution. However, this technique can be used only in organisms with a low propensity of light scattering such as zebra fish embryos11. Still, none of these techniques can be applied in the highly-scattering tissue of adult animals in several hundreds of micrometers, which are crucial models for the biomedical and clinical research of diseases with onset after birth.
Independent of the approximation used to calculate the diffraction-limited wave front shape, i.e. the point spread function (PSF), after focusing through a lens, the width of the PSF along the optical axis (axial resolution) is at least three times larger than the PSF width perpendicular to the optical axis (lateral resolution)12. Wave front distortions of different orders quantified by Zernike's coefficients considerably modify the wave front shape of focused electromagnetic wave in deep-tissue imaging leading to much larger PSFs, especially along the optical axis13-15. Hence, both the diffraction laws and the wave front distortion effects point to the resolution along the optical axis as the limiting factor in deep-tissue imaging. Whereas nanoscopy techniques focus on counteracting the limits of diffraction only, a technology which improves axial resolution and contrast by counteracting both diffraction and wave-front distortion effects is needed for high-resolution intravital imaging. Ideally, this technique should be also fast enough to allow monitoring of cellular dynamics.
The real-time correction of PSF aberrations and contrast loss using adaptive optics in TPLSM has been extensively studied and improved in the past decade13,14,16-18 and it is therefore the best currently available choice leading to a better management of ballistic excitation photons14. Still, due to the fact that most wave front correction approaches used in adaptive optics are iterative and that they have to be repeated for small areas (few 10 x 10 µm2) due to the high heterogeneity of the refractive index in tissue, the acquisition speed is significantly lower than necessary for imaging cell motility and communication. Moreover, the physical limit in adaptive-optics improved TPLSM is still determined by diffraction.
Spatial modulation of illumination (SPIN) and temporal modulation on the detection side (SPADE) have been theoretically proposed to be applied to laser-scanning microscopy to improve resolution. Their practical application in intravital imaging still remains to be demonstrated19.
Taken together, there is a high demand for the development of technologies, which improve the resolution for deep-tissue imaging in living adult animals. In this work, we achieve spatial modulation of the excitation pattern by controlling the scanning process in multi-beam striped-illumination multi-photon laser-scanning microscopy (MB-SI-MPLSM)20. Contrary to structured illumination approaches, in which the excitation beam cross section is spatially modulated, we use only the scanning process to achieve the spatial modulation of the excitation. By expanding the excitation to a longer wavelength, we are able to improve both spatial resolution and signal-to-noise ratio in deep-tissue of highly scattering tissue (e.g. lymph node, free-scattering path 47 µm6), independently of the optical non-linear signal we detect, e.g. fluorescence, second harmonic generation or other frequency mixing phenomenon. Using this approach at excitation wavelengths up to 900 nm we are able to dynamically image cellular protein structures on the scale of few molecules in germinal centers of mouse lymph nodes. Thus, we can better visualize the interaction between antigen carrying units on the surface of follicular dendritic cells and B cells in the process of probing the antigen during the immune response in secondary lymphoid organs.
Multi-beam Setup for Striped-illumination TPLSM
The setup used here is a specialized multi-beam two-photon laser-scanning microscope, as described previously6,20. The system is illustrated in Figure 1. The approach can be applied to other two-photon laser-scanning microscopes, which are able to synchronize camera acquisition with the movement of the galvoscanner mirrors, even if they are only capable to perform single-beam scanning. In this case, the disadvantage will be a lower acquisition speed, however similar to the acquisition speed in standard PMT-based TPLSM. In order to achieve optimal quality so far as resolution and contrast are concerned, at the lowest photobleaching and photodamage and fastest acquisition, it is recommendable to consider the following adjustment steps of the setup:
Mice Immunization and Preparation for Intravital Imaging
The animal experiments were approved by the appropriate state committees for animal welfare (LAGeSo, Landesamt für Gesundheit und Soziales, Berlin) and were performed in accordance with current guidelines and regulations (animal experiment license G0153/08).
The following steps should be considered for the preparation of the popliteal lymph node for intravital imaging (day 8-10 after immunization):
Spatial resolution in lymph nodes
The dimensions of the effective point spread function (ePSF) correspond to the spatial resolution of a microscope12. We measured this three dimensional function by acquiring the second harmonics generation signal of collagen fibers in lymph nodes by our MB-SI-TPLSM as compared to established two-photon laser scanning microscopy techniques, i.e. field detection TPLSM (by means of CCD cameras) and point detection TPLSM (by means of PMTs).
From these measurements it becomes obvious that at the surface of the specimen, both the lateral and axial resolutions correspond to the expected values predicted by the diffraction theory20. However, with increasing imaging depth and thus with increasing optical path of both excitation and emission radiation through media with highly varying refractive index, the spatial resolution deteriorates considerably, independently of the employed setup (Figure 2). By MB-SI-TPLSM we reached, independently of imaging depth, an approx. 20% better lateral resolution and a 220% better axial resolution as compared to the standard TPLSM approaches.
Dynamics of immune complexes on follicular dendritic cells in germinal centers
The clonal selection of B cells during the immune response, within secondary lymphoid organs of adult mice is the first step on their way to differentiate into memory B cells or plasma cells4. In this process, the highly dynamic interaction between follicular dendritic cells (FDC) and B cells at the level of immune complex structures (clusters of few protein molecules) within germinal centers is believed to play a central role. Only by using a highly resolving intravital microscopy technology it is possible to dissect this cellular communication and its implications for the immune response. Our approach of MB-SI-TPLSM provides for the first time the possibility of intravitally visualizing and quantifying the dimensions of the clusters of immune complex deposits as labeled by anti-CD21/35-Fab-ATTO590 on follicular dendritic cells, in up to 120 µm depth in germinal centers of popliteal lymph nodes (Figures 3a and 3b). While such structures are not visible by standard TPLSM approaches, we could identify them individually and even visualize their dynamics using our approach. Figures 3e and 3f support this insight, showing the direct comparison between the 3D fluorescence image of immune cell deposits in a germinal center as acquired by conventional TPLSM (PMT-based) and MB-SI-TPLSM. Moreover, the interactions of the immune complex deposits with germinal center B cells could be highly resolved (Figures 3c and 3d; Movies 1 and 2) and can now be investigated in combination with intravital functional probes for proliferation, differentiation or apoptosis. In a next step, we will use our approach to also investigate the dynamic communication of germinal B cells with T helper cells, believed to constitute the other decisive phenomenon for B cell clonal selection in secondary lymphoid organs.
Figure 1. Principle and setup of the multi-beam striped-illumination two-photon laser-scanning microscope. The beam of a tunable fs-pulsed Ti:Sa laser (wavelength range 690-1,080 nm, 140 fsec, 80 MHz) is attenuated by a module made of a λ/2 plate and a thin-film polarizer, its pulses are precompressed in a prism-based GVD-compensation module and finally split into 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, or 64 beams, forming a beamlet line. Two consecutive beamlets within the line have perpendicular polarizations (labeled red and green in the beamlet line) and are shifted in time in order to avoid interference. The time-shift between two consecutive beamlets amounts to 3 psec. For image acquisition, the beamlet line is focused into the sample by an objective lens (20X water immersion objective lens, NA 0.95, WD 2 mm) and perpendicularly scanned, so that a well-defined periodical pattern is generated. This pattern is translated along the beamlet line. The series of images generated this way are detected through interference filters mounted on a filter wheel by an EM-CCD camera and finally evaluated by a minimum-maximum algorithm. Single-beam TPLSM based on PMT-detection was performed with the same microscope. In this case, we used only one laser beam to scan the sample, and we spectrally resolved the fluorescence signal with corresponding dichroic mirrors and interference filters before detecting it with photomultiplier tubes. Alternatively, instead of the Ti:Sa laser beam, the beam of an optical parametric oscillator can be coupled to the microscope to perform long-wavelength MB-SI-TPLSM. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Spatial resolution of multi-beam striped-illumination TPLSM compared to standard PMT-based and multifocal CCD-based TPLSM. (a) Representative axial profiles as well as xy and xz projections of SHG in collagen fibers in 100 µm depth within lymph node. lexc = 900 nm, detection wavelengths range 447 ± 30 nm, photon flux Φ = 4.75 x 1029 photon/cm2·sec. (b) Yellow-green fluorescing beads embedded in agarose as recorded by MB-SI-TPLSM and conventional TPLSM (SB-PMT). λexc = 850 nm, detection wavelengths range 525 ± 25 nm, photon flux Φ = 2.08 x 1029 photon/cm2·sec, mesh unit = 3.7 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Intravital imaging of germinal centers by MB-SI-TPLSM. (a) 3D fluorescence image of the light zone of a germinal center labeled by CD21/35-Fab-ATTO590 (red) in a mouse immunized with haptene – chicken γ-globulin (NP-CgG) after adoptive transfer of B1-8 EGFP+ B cells (green). The immune complex deposits (CD21/35 labeling) on follicular dendritic cells (FDC) can be visualized individually, as observed in the zoom-in (b) of the image (a), and have (both lateral and axial) dimensions in the range of 400-800 nm in up to 120 µm depth. Germinal center B cells in the immunized B1-8 EGFP+ mouse are detected (c), whilst the contacts (d) partially responsible for the maturation of the immune response can now also be visualized. λexc = 850 nm, detection wavelengths range 605 ± 20 nm (ATTO590) and 525 ± 25 nm (EGFP), photon flux Φ = 7.05 x 1028 photon/cm2·sec. Scale bar (a) 20 µm, (b) 10 µm, (c) 30 µm, (d) 10 µm. 3D fluorescence images of the same area within the light zone of a germinal center labeled by CD21/35-Fab-ATTO590 as recorded by MB-SI-TPLSM (e) and conventional (PMT-based) TPLSM (f), respectively. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Movie captions
Movie-1 and -2
Dynamics of immune complex deposits on secondary follicular dendritic cells (FDC) and their interaction with germinal center B Cells as recorded by MB-SI-TPLSM. The immune complex deposits are labeled by CD21/35-Fab-ATTO590 (red) whereas the germinal center B cells are B1-8 Jk-/- EGFP+ cells (green).
The aim of intravital optical imaging is to dynamically and functionally visualize cellular motility and interactions in order to understand tissue and organ function in health and disease5. The most powerful technology to achieve this, multi-photon laser-scanning microscopy, still has to overcome limitations related to wave front distortions, scattering, slow acquisition, photobleaching and photodamage, which limit its spatial resolution, contrast as well as its time-resolution.
There are two successful solutions to achieve a better excitation (and emission) photon management in deep-tissue leading to better spatial resolutions, increased contrast (increased signal-to-noise ratio, due to increased signal) and, thus, reduced photobleaching and photodamage: the adaptive-optics approaches and the use of longer excitation wavelengths – tunable infrared excitation6. In the last decade, the concept of wave front correction by adaptive optics has been transferred from astronomy to bio-optical imaging and also to multi-photon microscopy. While the first adaptive optics approaches for two-photon microscopy relied on wave front sensing and needed a subdiffraction reference, i.e. a "guide star", similar to astronomy, current systems are better suited to deep-tissue imaging12. For instance, they use coherence-gating of the excitation radiation for wave front sensing13,15, or they do not use any external wave front sensing at all, but develop adaption algorithms based either on cross-correlation of images after pupil segmentation17 or on iterative stochastic search of the ideal parameters and subsequent interference with the uncorrected image as obtained from the previous iteration step – IMPACT16, or they use photo-acoustics to characterize the wave front distortions and scattering effects20. Still, due to a highly varying refractive index in tissue, the adaptive optics approaches are rather slow, since the correction step has to be repeated for relatively small areas (approx. 10 x 10 µm2)16. Additionally, either by wave front or scattering effect correction, the maximum achievable spatial resolution is still limited by diffraction.
Our approach is able to partially overcome the burdens of wave front aberration and of scattering but also pushes the resolution beyond the diffraction limit. Using objective lenses with higher numerical aperture, the absolute values for the axial resolution may improve to around 400 nm20. The price for the improved resolution is a steeper decay of signal-to-noise ratio in deep-tissue as compared to conventional TPLSM. This is due to the necessity to use field detection in MB-SI-TPLSM. As shown before15, the use of field detectors instead of point detectors is associated with this steeper decay of SNR due to the stronger scattering of emitted light which is relevant only for field detection. Thus, the maximum imaging depth for field detection TPLSM methods is approx. 25% reduced as compared to conventional (i.e. point detection based) TPLSM. A straightforward practical solution is to apply longer excitation wavelengths and to detect longer emission wavelengths. Naturally, this improves the depth-dependent SNR in conventional TPLSM to the same extent as in MB-SI-TPLSM.
As far as the acquisition speed is concerned, MB-SI-TPLSM is limited only by the speed of the galvanometric scanner and/or by the read-out of the camera and profits of the beam splitting to 32 laser beam lets. As compared to standard multi-beam camera-based TPLSM, MB-SI-TPLSM is slightly slower due to the need not only to scan but also to synchronously acquire each of approx. 10 striped illuminated images to generate the final high-resolution image. However, our technique retains a clear speed advantage over the conventional TPLSM (based on single-beam scanning and point detection). Hence, the acquisition time of a 150 x 150 µm2 (512 x 512 pixel) is 841 msec using conventional TPLSM (scanner frequency 800 Hz) and 109 msec using MB-SI-TPLSM. Thereby, the excitation power per beam and the dwell time per pixel are the same for both conventional and MB-SI TPLSM, so that the signal is comparable for both setups. As previously demonstrated20, photobleaching and photodamage effects in MB-SI-TPLSM experiments are low and comparable to well performed conventional TPLSM.
In the future it would be desirable to combine the complementary approaches of adaptive-optics and striped-illumination in the infrared range to further improve intravital TPLSM, similar to the achievements in adaptive optics for structured-illumination21. However, in order to achieve these goals, considerably faster adaptive-optics approaches must be developed.
The expected high impact of the striped-illumination approach for biosciences and biomedicine lies in its capacity to improve resolution and enhance contrast in deep tissue, counteracting wave front distortion and scattering effects, but also going beyond the diffraction limits in laser-scanning microscopes, by simply controlling the scanning process and choosing an appropriately sensitive field detector.
The expected high impact of the striped-illumination approach for biosciences and biomedicine lies in its capacity to improve resolution and enhance contrast in deep tissue, counteracting wave front distortion and scattering effects, but also going beyond the diffraction limits in laser-scanning microscopes, by simply controlling the scanning process and choosing an appropriately sensitive field detector.
The striped-illumination approach can be applied for intravital deep-tissue imaging in all two-photon laser scanning microscopes that are capable to synchronize camera detection with the galvoscanner movement in single-beam scanning. In this case, the single stripes within the excitation pattern are generated subsequently and not simultaneously as in MB-SI-TPLSM. Using single beam scanning in SI-TPLSM we naturally expect a slightly slower acquisition rate of the fluorescence images as compared to conventional TPLSM (single beam scanning, point detector-based TPLSM) but the same improvement in spatial resolution and contrast as demonstrated for MB-SI-TPLSM. The lower acquisition speed together with the limitation in imaging depth considerably reduces the application range of single-beam SI-TPLSM as compared to MB-SI-TPLSM.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank R. Heintzmann for fruitful discussions during the development of the striped-illumination approach, K. Rajewsky and A. Haberman for providing C57BL/6 B1-8 GFP transgenic mice. We acknowledge the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under grant NI1167/3-1 (to R.N.), HA5354/4-1 and SFB633, project A15 (to A.E.H.), the Charité under grant Rahel-Hirsch fellowship (to R.N.) for financial support. We particularly acknowledge the network JIMI for fruitful discussions and infrastructural support
ATTO590 – NSH for coupling | ATTO Tec, Germany | AD-590-35 | – |
CD21/35 – Fab fragment – ATTO590 | DRFZ, Berlin | – | The coupling reaction was performed in the central lab of our institution. |
B1-8 Jk-/- EGFP+ | Prof. Anne Habermann, Yale Univ., CA, US | – | Can be also found at Jackson Laboratories (JAX). |
EasySep Negative Selection Mouse B Cell Enrichment | StemmCell Technologies, Germany | 19854 | – |
Polystyren beads (605), 0.2 µm | Life Technologies, Germany | F8803 | – |
Name of Equipment | Company | Catalog Number | Comments/Description |
TriMScope I | LaVision Biotec, Bielefeld, Germany | – | – |
OPO (manual version) | APE, Berlin, Germany | – | – |
Ti:Sa Laser Chameleon Ultra II | Coherent, Duisburg, Germany | – | – |
water-immersion objective lens, 20x, NA 0.95, IR, WD 2 mm | Olympus Germany, Hamburg, Germany | – | – |