Abstract

Although modern fluorescence microscopy produces detailed three-dimensional (3D) datasets, colocalization analysis and region of interest (ROI) selection is most commonly performed two-dimensionally (2D) using maximum intensity projections (MIP). However, these 2D projections exclude much of the available data. Furthermore, 2D ROI selections cannot adequately select complex 3D structures which may inadvertently lead to either the exclusion of relevant or the inclusion of irrelevant data points, consequently affecting the accuracy of the colocalization analysis. Using a virtual reality (VR) enabled system, we demonstrate that 3D visualization, sample interrogation and analysis can be achieved in a highly controlled and precise manner. We calculate several key colocalization metrics using both 2D and 3D derived super-resolved structured illumination-based data sets. Using a neuronal injury model, we investigate the change in colocalization between Tau and acetylated α-tubulin at control conditions, after 6 hours and again after 24 hours. We demonstrate that performing colocalization analysis in 3D enhances its sensitivity, leading to a greater number of statistically significant differences than could be established when using 2D methods. Moreover, by carefully delimiting the 3D structures under analysis using the 3D VR system, we were able to reveal a time dependent loss in colocalization between the Tau and microtubule network as an early event in neuronal injury. This behavior could not be reliably detected using a 2D based projection. We conclude that, using 3D colocalization analysis, biologically relevant samples can be interrogated and assessed with greater precision, thereby better exploiting the potential of fluorescence-based image analysis in biomedical research.

Highlights

  • Fluorescence microscopy allows the tagging of particular macromolecules of interest and the subsequent study of their role in biological processes [1, 2]

  • Colocalization refers to the geometric codistribution of two fluorescent labels or color channels. It is usually assessed over a whole cell and metrically described using Pearson’s correlation coefficient (PCC), Manders’ overlap coefficient (MOC) and Manders’ correlation coefficient (MCC)

  • Our experiments indicate that enhanced and more sensitive colocalization analysis is possible when carrying out three-dimensional region of interest selection

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Summary

Introduction

Fluorescence microscopy allows the tagging of particular macromolecules of interest and the subsequent study of their role in biological processes [1, 2]. With advances in fluorescence image acquisition and processing, such as confocal and Super Resolution Structured Illumination Microscopy (SR-SIM), it has become common practice to analyze the z-stacks, consisting of multiple two-dimensional (2D) fluorescence image frames, which these microscopes produce These 2D images can be three-dimensionally (3D) reconstructed using direct-volume rendering [3,4,5,6], allowing the interrogation of the sample in 3D which can provide additional insight into biological events. Because the projection is usually orthographic, at each x-y coordinate the MIP retains only the voxel among all the image frames with the maximum intensity Using this projection, excludes most of the data from the analysis. The use of the MIP for ROI selection can result in both the exclusion of relevant data points and the inclusion of irrelevant data, leading to possible inaccuracies in the colocalization analysis

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