Abstract

BackgroundMicrometer-resolution neuroimaging with gold-standard conventional histology requires tissue fixation and embedding. The exchange of solvents for the creation of sectionable paraffin blocks modifies tissue density and generates non-uniform brain shrinkage. New methodWe employed synchrotron radiation-based X-ray microtomography for slicing- and label-free virtual histology of the mouse brain at different stages of the standard preparation protocol from formalin fixation via ascending ethanol solutions and xylene to paraffin embedding. Segmentation of anatomical regions allowed us to quantify non-uniform tissue shrinkage. Global and local changes in X-ray absorption gave insight into contrast enhancement for virtual histology. ResultsThe volume of the entire mouse brain was 60%, 56%, and 40% of that in formalin for, respectively, 100% ethanol, xylene, and paraffin. The volume changes of anatomical regions such as the hippocampus, anterior commissure, and ventricles differ from the global volume change. X-ray absorption of the full brain decreased, while local absorption differences increased, resulting in enhanced contrast for virtual histology. These trends were also observed with laboratory microtomography measurements. Comparison with existing methodsMicrotomography provided sub-10 μm spatial resolution with sufficient density resolution to resolve anatomical structures at each step of the embedding protocol. The spatial resolution of conventional computed tomography and magnetic resonance microscopy is an order of magnitude lower and both do not match the contrast of microtomography over the entire embedding protocol. Unlike feature-to-feature or total volume measurements, our approach allows for calculation of volume change based on segmentation. ConclusionWe present isotropic micrometer-resolution imaging to quantify morphology and composition changes in a mouse brain during the standard histological preparation. The proposed method can be employed to identify the most appropriate embedding medium for anatomical feature visualization, to reveal the basis for the dramatic X-ray contrast enhancement observed in numerous embedded tissues, and to quantify morphological changes during tissue fixation and embedding.

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