Selected Grantee Publications
- Clear All
- 3 results found
- nci
- R43/R44 [SBIR]
Characterizing a Photoacoustic and Fluorescence Imaging Platform for Preclinical Murine Longitudinal Studies
Thompson et al., Journal of Biomedical Optics . 2023.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36895414/
Preclinical studies using animal models require medical imaging technology with sufficient resolution and sensitivity for anatomical, functional, and molecular assessments. Photoacoustic (PA) tomography provides high resolution and specificity, and fluorescence (FL) molecular tomography provides high sensitivity; the combination of these imaging modalities capitalizes on their strengths and mitigates disadvantages. In this publication, the authors describe TriTom, a preclinical imaging system that integrates PA and FL. They characterized the PA spatial resolution, PA sensitivity, PA spectral accuracy, optical spatial resolution, and FL sensitivity of the platform and demonstrated anatomical imaging in mice. This report demonstrates TriTom’s suitability for biomedical imaging applications. Supported by ORIP (R43OD023029) and NCI.
Gigapixel Imaging With a Novel Multi-Camera Array Microscope
Thomson et al., eLife. 2022.
https://www.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.74988
The dynamics of living organisms are organized across many spatial scales. The investigators created assembled a scalable multi-camera array microscope (MCAM) that enables comprehensive high-resolution, large field-of-view recording from multiple spatial scales simultaneously, ranging from structures that approach the cellular scale to large-group behavioral dynamics. By collecting data from up to 96 cameras, they computationally generated gigapixel-scale images and movies with a field of view over hundreds of square centimeters at an optical resolution of 18 µm. This system allows the team to observe the behavior and fine anatomical features of numerous freely moving model organisms on multiple spatial scales (e.g., larval zebrafish, fruit flies, slime mold). Overall, by removing the bottlenecks imposed by single-camera image acquisition systems, the MCAM provides a powerful platform for investigating detailed biological features and behavioral processes of small model organisms. Supported by ORIP (R44OD024879), NIEHS, NCI, and NIBIB.
Acoustofluidic Rotational Tweezing Enables High-Speed Contactless Morphological Phenotyping of Zebrafish Larvae
Chen et al., Nature Communications. 2021.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33602914/
These authors demonstrate an acoustofluidic rotational tweezing platform that enables contactless, high-speed, 3D multispectral imaging and digital reconstruction of zebrafish larvae for quantitative phenotypic analysis. The acoustic-induced polarized vortex streaming achieves contactless and rapid (~1 s/rotation) rotation of zebrafish larvae enabling multispectral imaging of the zebrafish body and internal organs. They developed a 3D reconstruction pipeline that yields accurate 3D models based on the multi-view images for quantitative evaluation. With its contactless nature and advantages in speed and automation, the acoustofluidic rotational tweezing system has the potential to be a valuable asset for developmental biology and pre-clinical drug development in pharmacology. Supported by ORIP (R43OD024963), NCI, and NIGMS.