Abstract

The liver as the largest organ in the human body is composed of a complex macroscopic and microscopic architecture that supports its indispensable function to maintain physiological homeostasis. Optical imaging of the human liver is particularly challenging because of the need to cover length scales across 7 orders of magnitude (from the centimeter scale to the nanometer scale) in order to fully assess the ultrastructure of the entire organ down to the subcellular scale and probe its physiological function. This task becomes even more challenging the deeper within the organ one hopes to image, because of the strong absorption and scattering of visible light by the liver. Here, we demonstrate how optical imaging methods utilizing highly specific fluorescent labels, as well as label-free optical methods can seamlessly cover this entire size range in excised, fixed human liver tissue and we exemplify this by reconstructing the biliary tree in three-dimensional space. Imaging of tissue beyond approximately 0.5 mm length requires optical clearing of the human liver. We present the successful use of optical projection tomography and light-sheet fluorescence microscopy to derive information about the liver architecture on the millimeter scale. The intermediate size range is covered using label-free structural and chemically sensitive methods, such as second harmonic generation and coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering microscopy. Laser-scanning confocal microscopy extends the resolution to the nanoscale, allowing us to ultimately image individual liver sinusoidal endothelial cells and their fenestrations by super-resolution structured illumination microscopy. This allowed us to visualize the human hepatobiliary system in 3D down to the cellular level, which indicates that reticular biliary networks communicate with portal bile ducts via single or a few ductuli. Non-linear optical microscopy enabled us to identify fibrotic regions extending from the portal field to the parenchyma, along with microvesicular steatosis in liver biopsies from an older patient. Lastly, super-resolution microscopy allowed us to visualize and determine the size distribution of fenestrations in human liver sinusoidal endothelial cells for the first time under aqueous conditions. Thus, this proof-of-concept study allows us to demonstrate, how, in combination, these techniques open up a new chapter in liver biopsy analysis.

Highlights

  • The human liver is the largest internal organ of the human body and indispensable for the maintenance of physiological homeostasis

  • We provide examples for mesoscale, microscale and nanoscale fluorescence microscopy methods and their partial combination that allow for comprehensively imaging liver morphology

  • Mesoscopic imaging techniques, such as optical projection tomography and light sheet fluorescence microscopy were used to produce three-dimensional maps of liver tissue

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Summary

Introduction

The human liver is the largest internal organ of the human body and indispensable for the maintenance of physiological homeostasis. Fast access to dietary components and xenobiotics entering the circulation predestines the liver to a prime role in the uptake and storage of vitamins and metals, carbohydrate metabolism and detoxification in particular of hydrophobic substances. The liver is the central metabolic hub of any organism and at the same time responsible for the production of bile and digestive factors and the discharge of metabolic end products and solubilized hydrophobic molecules. The central physiological function and metabolic activity of the liver are reflected by its unique circulatory integration. About 75% of the blood supply to the liver are delivered by the portal vein providing rapid access to newly absorbed dietary constituents. Inflowing blood is split among the eight segments of the two liver lobes, with each segment possessing its independent vascular supply and extrinsic bile duct (Figure 1A)

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