When conducting optical imaging experiments, in vivo, the signal to noise ratio and effective spatial and temporal resolution is fundamentally limited by physiological motion of the tissue. A three-dimensional (3D) motion tracking scheme, using a multiphoton excitation microscope with a resonant galvanometer, (512 × 512 pixels at 33 frames s-1) is described to overcome physiological motion, in vivo. The use of commercially available graphical processing units permitted the rapid 3D cross-correlation of sequential volumes to detect displacements and adjust tissue position to track motions in near real-time. Motion phantom tests maintained micron resolution with displacement velocities of up to 200 μm min-1, well within the drift observed in many biological tissues under physiologically relevant conditions. In vivo experiments on mouse skeletal muscle using the capillary vasculature with luminal dye as a displacement reference revealed an effective and robust method of tracking tissue motion to enable (1) signal averaging over time without compromising resolution, and (2) tracking of cellular regions during a physiological perturbation. © 2012 The Authors Journal of Microscopy © 2012 Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health.
CITATION STYLE
Bakalar, M. H., Schroeder, J. L., Pursley, R., Pohida, T. J., Glancy, B., Taylor, J., … Balaban, R. S. (2012). Three-dimensional motion tracking for high-resolution optical microscopy, in vivo. Journal of Microscopy, 246(3), 237–247. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2818.2012.03613.x
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