Author:
Xie Danny F.,Crouzet Christian,LoPresti Krystal,Wang Yuke,Robinson Christopher,Jones William,Muqolli Fjolla,Fang Chuo,Cribbs David H.,Fisher Mark,Choi Bernard
Abstract
AbstractThe microvasculature facilitates gas exchange, provides nutrients to cells, and regulates blood flow in response to stimuli. Vascular abnormalities are an indicator of pathology for various conditions, such as compromised vessel integrity in small vessel disease and angiogenesis in tumors. Traditional immunohistochemistry enables visualization of tissue cross-sections containing exogenously labeled vasculature. Although this approach can be utilized to quantify vascular changes within small fields-of-view, it is not a practical way to study the vasculature on the scale of whole organs. Three-dimensional (3D) imaging presents a more appropriate method to visualize the vascular architecture in tissue. Here we describe the complete protocol that we use to characterize the vasculature of different organs in mice encompassing the methods to fluorescently label vessels, optically clear tissue, collect 3D vascular images, and quantify these vascular images with a semi-automated approach. To validate the automated segmentation of vascular images, one user manually segmented fifty random regions of interest across different vascular images. The automated segmentation results had an average sensitivity of 80±8% and an average specificity of 90±5% when compared to manual segmentation. Applying this procedure of image analysis presents a method to reliably quantify and characterize vascular networks in a timely fashion. This procedure is also applicable to other methods of tissue clearing and vascular labels that generate 3D images of microvasculature.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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