The Francis Crick Institute
Browse

High content 3D imaging by dual-view oblique plane microscopy

Download (1.59 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-12-11, 14:32 authored by Hugh Sparks, Leo Rowe-Brown, Yuriy Alexandrov, Nils Gustafsson, Liuba Dvinskikh, Nathan Curry, Jayne Culley, Martin Lee, Alix Le Marois, Colin DH Ratcliffe, Thomas A Phillips, Claudia Owczarek, Mar Arias Garcia, Montserrat Llanses, Theresa Suckert, Joffrey Pelletier, Carme Cortina, Wenzhi Hong, Edwin Garcia, Zhizhen Xu, Shengjie Zhang, Giorgio Stassi, Eduard Batlle, Julien Colombelli, Maddy Parsons, Chris Bakal, Neil O Carragher, Erik Sahai, Chris Dunsby
Oblique plane microscopy (OPM) is a form of light-sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) employing a single microscope objective at the sample for both fluorescence excitation and detection. Dual-view OPM (dOPM) is an optically folded form of OPM. We present an improved dOPM system employing a 60×/1.2NA water immersion primary objective and measure the spatial resolution and fluorescence collection efficiency for illumination angles of 35° and 45° with respect to the coverslip. Illumination at 35° provides slightly better lateral resolution and collection efficiency. Collection efficiency measurements are compared to a full vectorial raytracing simulation of the system. Using a light-sheet angle of 35°, the median bead FWHM for 100 nm diameter fluorescent beads in x, y and z and the optical sectioning strength were measured over a volume of 100×100×100 μm3 to be 0.29, 0.31, 0.83 and 2.45-3.00 μm respectively when the two dOPM views are fused. We demonstrate less photobleaching in time-lapse dOPM of live mEmerald-expressing organoids compared to widefield epi-fluorescence z-stack imaging under the condition of equal detected fluorescence signal from a point object in focus. We demonstrate dOPM for multi-field-of-view 3D imaging of biological samples in 96-well plates and apply it to imaging cells in collagen gel and quantifying the FUCCI cell-cycle reporter to provide drug dose-response curves in spheroids. We also use it to perform time-lapse multi-field-of-view imaging and demonstrate the detection of organoid lumen closure and reopening, organoid migration within a collagen gel and observing dynamic events in arrays of ex vivo tissue slices.

Funding

European Research Council (Grant ID: 101019366) Crick (Grant ID: CC2040, Grant title: Sahai CC2040) European Research Council (Grant ID: 101019366 - CAN_ORGANISE, Grant title: ERC 101019366 - CAN_ORGANISE)

History

Usage metrics

    The Francis Crick Institute

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC