Optimization of a widefield structured illumination microscope for non-destructive assessment and quantification of nuclear features in tumor margins of a primary mouse model of sarcoma.
Abstract
Cancer is associated with specific cellular morphological changes, such as increased
nuclear size and crowding from rapidly proliferating cells. In situ tissue imaging
using fluorescent stains may be useful for intraoperative detection of residual cancer
in surgical tumor margins. We developed a widefield fluorescence structured illumination
microscope (SIM) system with a single-shot FOV of 2.1 × 1.6 mm (3.4 mm(2)) and sub-cellular
resolution (4.4 µm). The objectives of this work were to measure the relationship
between illumination pattern frequency and optical sectioning strength and signal-to-noise
ratio in turbid (i.e. thick) samples for selection of the optimum frequency, and to
determine feasibility for detecting residual cancer on tumor resection margins, using
a genetically engineered primary mouse model of sarcoma. The SIM system was tested
in tissue mimicking solid phantoms with various scattering levels to determine impact
of both turbidity and illumination frequency on two SIM metrics, optical section thickness
and modulation depth. To demonstrate preclinical feasibility, ex vivo 50 µm frozen
sections and fresh intact thick tissue samples excised from a primary mouse model
of sarcoma were stained with acridine orange, which stains cell nuclei, skeletal muscle,
and collagenous stroma. The cell nuclei were segmented using a high-pass filter algorithm,
which allowed quantification of nuclear density. The results showed that the optimal
illumination frequency was 31.7 µm(-1) used in conjunction with a 4 × 0.1 NA objective
(v=0.165). This yielded an optical section thickness of 128 µm and an 8.9 × contrast
enhancement over uniform illumination. We successfully demonstrated the ability to
resolve cell nuclei in situ achieved via SIM, which allowed segmentation of nuclei
from heterogeneous tissues in the presence of considerable background fluorescence.
Specifically, we demonstrate that optical sectioning of fresh intact thick tissues
performed equivalently in regards to nuclear density quantification, to physical frozen
sectioning and standard microscopy.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Muscle, SkeletalCell Nucleus
Stromal Cells
Animals
Mice
Sarcoma, Experimental
Disease Models, Animal
Microscopy, Fluorescence
Phantoms, Imaging
Lighting
Algorithms
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26067Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1371/journal.pone.0068868Publication Info
Fu, Henry L; Mueller, Jenna L; Javid, Melodi P; Mito, Jeffrey K; Kirsch, David G;
Ramanujam, Nimmi; & Brown, J Quincy (2013). Optimization of a widefield structured illumination microscope for non-destructive
assessment and quantification of nuclear features in tumor margins of a primary mouse
model of sarcoma. PloS one, 8(7). pp. e68868. 10.1371/journal.pone.0068868. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26067.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Melodi Javid Whitley
Assistant Professor of Dermatology
Melodi Javid Whitley, MD, PhDAssistant Professor of DermatologyAssistant Program Director
for Trainee ResearchDirector of Transplant DermatologyI am a physician scientist focused
on the dermatologic care of solid organ transplant recipients. Clinically, I manage
the the complex dermatologic side effects of immunosuppression with a focus on high-risk
skin cancer. My research focuses on understanding the drivers of cutaneous malignancy
in
David Guy Kirsch
Barbara Levine University Distinguished Professor
My clinical interests are the multi-modality care of patients with bone and soft tissue
sarcomas and developing new sarcoma therapies. My laboratory interests include utilizing
mouse models of cancer to study cancer and radiation biology in order to develop new
cancer therapies in the pre-clinical setting.
Jenna Mueller
Affiliate
Dr. Jenna Mueller is a postdoctoral associate in biomedical engineering who works
with the Center for Global Women’s Health Technologies at Duke University to develop
low-cost devices and therapies to improve the management of cervical cancer in low
and middle-income countries (LMICs). She worked with a multidisciplinary team to develop
the Pocket colposcope, a low-cost, portable device to screen women for cervical pre-cancer
at the primary care setting, and conducted studies to demonst
Nimmi Ramanujam
Robert W. Carr, Jr., Distinguished Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Ramanujam obtained her Ph.D. degree at the University of Texas at Austin. She progressed
through the ranks as an academic researcher; the first five years as a research scientist
and postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania, the next five as an assistant
professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and the following five as an associate
professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Duke University. In 2011
she was promoted to full professor. Ramanujam is in
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