Abstract

The ability to acquire three-dimensional (3D) information of cellular structures without the need for fluorescent tags or staining makes holotomographic imaging a powerful tool in cellular biology. It provides valuable insights by measuring the refractive index (RI), an optical parameter describing the phase delay of light that passes through the living cell.Here, we demonstrate holotomographic imaging on industrial relevant ascomycete fungi and study their development and morphogenesis. This includes conidial germination, subcellular dynamics, and cytoplasmic flow during hyphal growth in Aspergillus niger. In addition, growth and budding of Aureobasidium pullulans cells are captured using holotomographic microscopy. Coupled to fluorescence imaging, lipid droplets, vacuoles, the mitochondrial network, and nuclei are targeted and analyzed in the 3D RI reconstructed images. While lipid droplets and vacuoles can be assigned to a specific RI pattern, mitochondria and nuclei were not pronounced. We show, that the lower sensitivity of RI measurements derives from the fungal cell wall that acts as an additional barrier for the illumination light of the microscope. After cell wall digest of hyphae and protoplast formation of A. niger expressing GFP-tagged histone H2A, location of nuclei could be determined by non-invasive RI measurements. Furthermore, we used coupled fluorescence microscopy to observe migration of nuclei in unperturbed hyphal segments and duplication during growth on a single-cell level. Detailed micromorphological studies in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Trichoderma reesei are challenging due to cell size restrictions.Overall, holotomography opens up new avenues for exploring dynamic cellular processes in real time and enables the visualization of fungi from a new perspective.

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