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BrainFilm, a novel technique for physical compression of 3D brain slices for efficient image acquisition and post-processing.


ABSTRACT: Tissue clearing enables us to observe thick tissue at a single cell resolution by reducing light scattering and refractive index matching. However, imaging of a large volume of tissue for 3D reconstruction requires a great deal of time, cost, and efforts. Few methods have been developed to transcend these limitations by mechanical compression or isotropic tissue shrinkage. Tissue shrinkage significantly lessens the imaging burden; however, there is an inevitable trade-off with image resolution. Here, we have developed the "BrainFilm" technique to compress cleared tissue at Z-axis by dehydration, without alteration of the XY-axis. The Z-axis compression was approximately 90%, and resulted in substantial reduction in image acquisition time and data size. The BrainFilm technique was successfully used to trace and characterize the morphology of thick biocytin-labelled neurons following electrophysiological recording and trace the GFP-labelled long nerve projections in irregular tissues such as the limb of mouse embryo. Thus, BrainFilm is a versatile tool that can be applied in diverse studies of 3D tissues in which spatial information of the Z-axis is dispensable.

SUBMITTER: Kim JY 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5986777 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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BrainFilm, a novel technique for physical compression of 3D brain slices for efficient image acquisition and post-processing.

Kim Joo Yeon JY   Kim Hyun Jung HJ   Jang Min Jee MJ   Kim June Hoan JH   Lee Ju-Hyun JH   Lee Eunsoo E   Park Kyerl K   Kim Hyuncheol H   Lee Jaedong J   Kwag Jeehyun J   Kim Namhee N   Song Mi-Ryoung MR   Kim Hyun H   Sun Woong W  

Scientific reports 20180604 1


Tissue clearing enables us to observe thick tissue at a single cell resolution by reducing light scattering and refractive index matching. However, imaging of a large volume of tissue for 3D reconstruction requires a great deal of time, cost, and efforts. Few methods have been developed to transcend these limitations by mechanical compression or isotropic tissue shrinkage. Tissue shrinkage significantly lessens the imaging burden; however, there is an inevitable trade-off with image resolution.  ...[more]

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