Super-Resolution Microscopy: A Technique to Revolutionize Research and Diagnosis of Glomerulopathies

Glomerular Dis. 2022 Dec 18;3(1):19-28. doi: 10.1159/000528713. eCollection 2023 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

Background: For decades, knowledge about glomerular (patho)physiology has been tightly linked with advances in microscopic imaging technology. For example, the invention of electron microscopy was required to hypothesize about the mode of glomerular filtration barrier function.

Summary: Super-resolution techniques, defined as fluorescence microscopy approaches that surpass the optical resolution limit of around 200 nm, have been made available to the scientific community. Several of these different techniques are currently in use in glomerular research. Using three-dimensional structured illumination microscopy, the exact morphology of the podocyte filtration slit can be morphometrically analyzed and quantitatively compared across samples originating from animal models or human biopsies.

Key messages: Several quantitative image analysis approaches and their potential influence on glomerular research and diagnostics are discussed. By improving not only optical resolution but also information content and turnaround time, super-resolution microscopy has the potential to expand the diagnosis of glomerular disease. Soon, these approaches could be introduced into glomerular disease diagnosis.

Keywords: Fluorescence microscopy; Glomerular disease; Quantitative image analysis; Super-resolution microscopy.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work has been supported by a starting grant of the “Forschungsverbund Molekulare Medizin” and by a scholarship of the “Gerhardt-Domagk Masterclass” of the University Medicine Greifswald to FS. This work has been supported by a grant from the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, Grant 01 GM1518B, STOP- FSGS) to NE. This work was generously supported by the Südmeyer fund for kidney and vascular research (“Südmeyer Stiftung für Nieren- und Gefäßforschung”) and the Dr. Gerhard Büchtemann fund, Hamburg, Germany. None of these funding sources had a direct influence on the conceptualization of the article.