Confocal imaging of biological tissues using second harmonic generation (original) (raw)

Second-Harmonic Imaging of Collagen

Methods in Molecular Biology™, 2006

Molecules that have no center of symmetry are able to convert light to its second harmonic, at twice the frequency and half the wavelength. This only happens with any efficiency at very high light intensities such as are given by a pulsed laser, and because the efficiency of the process depends on the square of the intensity, it will be focal plane selective in exactly the same way as two-photon excitation of fluorescence. Because of its unusual molecular structure and its high degree of crystallinity, collagen is, by far, the strongest source of second harmonics in animal tissue. Because collagen is also the most important structural protein in the mammalian body, this provides a very useful imaging tool for studying its distribution. No energy is lost in second-harmonic imaging, so the image will not fade, and because it is at a shorter wavelength than can be excited by two-photon fluorescence, it can be separated easily from multiple fluorescent probes. It is already proving useful in imaging collagen with high sensitivity in various tissues, including cirrhotic liver, normal and carious teeth, and surgical repair of tendons.

Characterization of the second harmonic signal from collagen

2003

Collagen is known to be a very effective generator of the second harmonic of incident light from 700 to 1100nm, and second harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy is coming into use as a tool for studying the distribution of collagen in tissue. It also shows promise as a technique for characterizing collagen - both in distinguishing different collagen types and their packing and in identifying degradation of collagen in pathologic conditions. However many aspects of image formation in SHG microscopy of collagen remain imperfectly understood, and we have commenced a rigorous study of these factors. The present paper presents the first results from this program.

Quantitative differentiation of normal and scarred tissues using second-harmonic generation microscopy

Scanning, 2016

The aim of this study was to differentiate normal and scarred hamster cheek pouch samples by applying a quantitative image analysis technique for determining collagen fiber direction and density in second-harmonic generation microscopy images. This paper presents a collagen tissue analysis of scarred cheek pouches of four adult male Golden Syrian hamsters as an animal model for vocal fold scarring. One cheek pouch was scarred using an electrocautery unit and the other cheek was used as a control for each hamster. A home-built upright microscope and a compact ultrafast fiber laser were used to acquire depth resolved epi-collected second-harmonic generation images of collagen fibers. To quantify the average fiber direction and fiber density in each image, we applied two-dimensional Fourier analysis and intensity thresholding at five different locations for each control and scarred tissue sample, respectively. The resultant depth-resolved average fiber direction variance for scarred ha...

Dynamic imaging of collagen and its modulation in tumors in vivo using second-harmonic generation

Nature medicine, 2003

The content and structure of collagen is essential in governing the delivery of therapeutic molecules in tumors. Thus, simple histological staining of tumor tissue biopsies for collagen could be used to assess the accessibility of molecular therapeutics in tumors. Here we show that it is possible to optically image fibrillar collagen in tumors growing in mice using secondharmonic generation (SHG). Using this noninvasive technique, we estimated relative diffusive hindrance, quantified the dynamics of collagen modification after pharmacologic intervention and provided mechanistic insight into improved diffusive transport induced by the hormone relaxin. This technology could offer basic scientists and clinicians an enhanced ability to estimate the relative penetrabilities of molecular therapeutics.

Interpreting Second-Harmonic Generation Images of Collagen I Fibrils

Biophysical Journal, 2005

Fibrillar collagen, being highly noncentrosymmetric, possesses a tremendous nonlinear susceptibility. As a result, second-harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy of collagen produces extremely bright and robust signals, providing an invaluable tool for imaging tissue structure with submicron resolution. Here we discuss fundamental principles governing SHG phase matching with the tightly focusing optics used in microscopy. Their application to collagen imaging yields several biophysical features characteristic of native collagen structure: SHG radiates from the shell of a collagen fibril, rather than from its bulk. This SHG shell may correspond to the supporting element of the fibril. Physiologically relevant changes in solution ionic strength alter the ratio of forward-to-backward propagating SHG, implying a resulting change in the SHG shell thickness. Fibrillogenesis can be resolved in immature tissue by directly imaging backward-propagating SHG. Such findings are crucial to the design and development of forthcoming diagnostic and research tools.

3Dimensional imaging of collagen using second-harmonic generation

2002

Collagen is the most important structural protein of the animal body. Its unique triple-helix structure and extremely high level of crystallinity make it exceptionally efficient in generating the second harmonic of incident light, and we show here how this leads to a novel mode of microscopy of immediate practical significance in medicine and biology. In particular, it provides sensitive and highresolution information on collagen distribution, discriminates between type I and type III collagen, and allows both a greater understanding of and a sensitive test for cirrhosis of the liver. Future research applications could include wound healing and hereditary collagen diseases such as osteogenesis imperfecta.

Imaging Collagen in Scar Tissue: Developments in Second Harmonic Generation Microscopy for Biomedical Applications

The ability to respond to injury with tissue repair is a fundamental property of all multicellular organisms. The extracellular matrix (ECM), composed of fibrillar collagens as well as a number of other components is dis-regulated during repair in many organs. In many tissues, scaring results when the balance is lost between ECM synthesis and degradation. Investigating what disrupts this balance and what effect this can have on tissue function remains an active area of research. Recent advances in the imaging of fibrillar collagen using second harmonic generation (SHG) imaging have proven useful in enhancing our understanding of the supramolecular changes that occur during scar formation and disease progression. Here, we review the physical properties of SHG, and the current nonlinear optical microscopy imaging (NLOM) systems that are used for SHG imaging. We provide an extensive review of studies that have used SHG in skin, lung, cardiovascular, tendon and ligaments, and eye tissue to understand alterations in fibrillar collagens in scar tissue. Lastly, we review the current methods of image analysis that are used to extract important information about the role of fibrillar collagens in scar formation.

Applications of second harmonic generation imaging microscopy in cardiovascular research

In this perspective, we discuss how the nonlinear optical technique of second-harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy has been used to greatly enhance our understanding of the tumor microenvironment (TME) of breast and ovarian cancer. Striking changes in collagen architecture are associated with these epithelial cancers, and SHG can image these changes with great sensitivity and specificity with submicrometer resolution. This information has not historically been exploited by pathologists but has the potential to enhance diagnostic and prognostic capabilities. We summarize the utility of image processing tools that analyze fiber morphology in SHG images of breast and ovarian cancer in human tissues and animal models. We also describe methods that exploit the SHG physical underpinnings that are effective in delineating normal and malignant tissues. First we describe the use of polarizationresolved SHG that yields metrics related to macromolecular and supramolecular structures. The coherence and corresponding phase-matching process of SHG results in emission directionality (forward to backward), which is related to sub-resolution fibrillar assembly. These analyses are more general and more broadly applicable than purely morphology-based analyses; however, they are more computationally intensive. Intravital imaging techniques are also emerging that incorporate all of these quantitative analyses. Now, all these techniques can be coupled with rapidly advancing miniaturization of imaging systems to afford their use in clinical situations including enhancing pathology analysis and also in assisting in real-time surgical determination of tumor margins.