Permittivity tensor imaging: modular label-free imaging of 3D dry mass and 3D orientation at high resolution

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Abstract

The dry mass and the orientation of biomolecules can be imaged without a label by measuring their permittivity tensor (PT), which describes how biomolecules affect the phase and polarization of light. Three-dimensional (3D) imaging of PT has been challenging. We present a label-free computational microscopy technique, PT imaging (PTI), for the 3D measurement of PT. PTI encodes the invisible PT into images using oblique illumination, polarization-sensitive detection and volumetric sampling. PT is decoded from the data with a vectorial imaging model and a multi-channel inverse algorithm, assuming uniaxial symmetry in each voxel. We demonstrate high-resolution imaging of PT of isotropic beads, anisotropic glass targets, mouse brain tissue, infected cells and histology slides. PTI outperforms previous label-free imaging techniques such as vector tomography, ptychography and light-field imaging in resolving the 3D orientation and symmetry of organelles, cells and tissue. We provide open-source software and modular hardware to enable the adoption of the method.

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Yeh, L. H., Ivanov, I. E., Chandler, T., Byrum, J. R., Chhun, B. B., Guo, S. M., … Mehta, S. B. (2024). Permittivity tensor imaging: modular label-free imaging of 3D dry mass and 3D orientation at high resolution. Nature Methods, 21(7), 1257–1274. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41592-024-02291-w

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