A tube-source X-ray microtomography approach for quantitative 3D microscopy of optically challenging cell-cultured samples

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Abstract

Development and study of cell-cultured constructs, such as tissue-engineering scaffolds or organ-on-a-chip platforms require a comprehensive, representative view on the cells inside the used materials. However, common characteristics of biomedical materials, for example, in porous, fibrous, rough-surfaced, and composite materials, can severely disturb low-energy imaging. In order to image and quantify cell structures in optically challenging samples, we combined labeling, 3D X-ray imaging, and in silico processing into a methodological pipeline. Cell-structure images were acquired by a tube-source X-ray microtomography device and compared to optical references for assessing the visual and quantitative accuracy. The spatial coverage of the X-ray imaging was demonstrated by investigating stem-cell nuclei inside clinically relevant-sized tissue-engineering scaffolds (5x13 mm) that were difficult to examine with the optical methods. Our results highlight the potential of the readily available X-ray microtomography devices that can be used to thoroughly study relative large cell-cultured samples with microscopic 3D accuracy.

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Tamminen, I., Lehto, K., Hannula, M., Ojansivu, M., Johansson, L., Kellomäki, M., … Hyttinen, J. (2020). A tube-source X-ray microtomography approach for quantitative 3D microscopy of optically challenging cell-cultured samples. Communications Biology, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-01273-w

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