Abstract

Investigating intestinal recovery in vivo is an exquisite technical challenge. A lack of longitudinal imaging protocols has prevented deeper insights into the cell and tissue scale dynamics that orchestrate intestinal regeneration. Here, we describe an intravital microscopy method that locally induces tissue damage at the single crypt scale and follows the regenerative response of the intestinal epithelium in living mice. Single crypts or larger intestinal fields were ablated by a high-intensity multiphoton infrared laser in a time- and space-controlled manner. Subsequent long-term repetitive intravital imaging enabled the tracking of the damaged areas over time and allowed for the monitoring of crypt dynamics during tissue recovery over a period of multiple weeks. Crypt remodeling events such as crypt fission, fusion, and disappearance were observed in the neighboring tissue upon laser-induced damage. This protocol enables the study of crypt dynamics both in homeostatic and pathophysiological settings, such as aging and tumor initiation.

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