Mesoscopic in vivo 3-D tracking of sparse cell populations using angular multiplexed optical projection tomography

Biomed Opt Express. 2015 Mar 12;6(4):1253-61. doi: 10.1364/BOE.6.001253. eCollection 2015 Apr 1.

Abstract

We describe an angular multiplexed imaging technique for 3-D in vivo cell tracking of sparse cell distributions and optical projection tomography (OPT) with superior time-lapse resolution and a significantly reduced light dose compared to volumetric time-lapse techniques. We demonstrate that using dual axis OPT, where two images are acquired simultaneously at different projection angles, can enable localization and tracking of features in 3-D with a time resolution equal to the camera frame rate. This is achieved with a 200x reduction in light dose compared to an equivalent volumetric time-lapse single camera OPT acquisition with 200 projection angles. We demonstrate the application of this technique to mapping the 3-D neutrophil migration pattern observed over ~25.5 minutes in a live 2 day post-fertilisation transgenic LysC:GFP zebrafish embryo following a tail wound.

Keywords: (170.2520) Fluorescence microscopy; (170.3010) Image reconstruction techniques; (170.6900) Three-dimensional microscopy; (170.6920) Time-resolved imaging.