Nonlinear-optical stain-free stereoimaging of astrocytes and gliovascular interfaces

J Biophotonics. 2019 Nov;12(11):e201800432. doi: 10.1002/jbio.201800432. Epub 2019 Jul 12.

Abstract

Methods of nonlinear optics provide a vast arsenal of tools for label-free brain imaging, offering a unique combination of chemical specificity, the ability to detect fine morphological features, and an unprecedentedly high, subdiffraction spatial resolution. While these techniques provide a rapidly growing platform for the microscopy of neurons and fine intraneural structures, optical imaging of astroglia still largely relies on filament-protein-antibody staining, subject to limitations and difficulties especially severe in live-brain studies. Once viewed as an ancillary, inert brain scaffold, astroglia are being promoted, as a part of an ongoing paradigm shift in neurosciences, into the role of a key active agent of intercellular communication and information processing, playing a significant role in brain functioning under normal and pathological conditions. Here, we show that methods of nonlinear optics provide a unique resource to address long-standing challenges in label-free astroglia imaging. We demonstrate that, with a suitable beam-focusing geometry and careful driver-pulse compression, microscopy of second-harmonic generation (SHG) can enable a high-resolution label-free imaging of fibrillar structures of astrocytes, most notably astrocyte processes and their endfeet. SHG microscopy of astrocytes is integrated in our approach with nonlinear-optical imaging of red blood cells based on third-harmonic generation (THG) enhanced by a three-photon resonance with the Soret band of hemoglobin. With astroglia and red blood cells providing two physically distinct imaging contrasts in SHG and THG channels, a parallel detection of the second and third harmonics enables a high-contrast, high-resolution, stain-free stereoimaging of gliovascular interfaces in the central nervous system. Transverse scans of the second and third harmonics are shown to resolve an ultrafine texture of blood-vessel walls and astrocyte-process endfeet on gliovascular interfaces with a spatial resolution within 1 μm at focusing depths up to 20 μm inside a brain.

Keywords: astrocytes; label-free microscopy; nonlinear-optical microscopy.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Astrocytes / cytology*
  • Blood Vessels / diagnostic imaging*
  • Erythrocytes / cytology
  • Fluorescence
  • Male
  • Neuroglia / cytology*
  • Nonlinear Dynamics*
  • Optical Imaging / methods*
  • Rats
  • Rats, Wistar