Multi-scale tissue fluorescence mapping with fiber optic ultraviolet excitation and generative modeling

  • Ang J
  • Tan K
  • Yong A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Cellular imaging of thick samples requires physical sectioning or laser scanning microscopy, which can be restrictive, involved, and generally incompatible with high-throughput requirements. We developed fiber optic microscopy with ultraviolet (UV) surface excitation (FUSE), a portable and quantitative fluorescence imaging platform for thick tissue that enabled quick sub-cellular imaging without thin sections. We substantially advanced prior UV excitation approaches with illumination engineering and computational methods. Optical fibers delivered <300nm light with directional control, enabling unprecedented 50× widefield imaging on thick tissue with sub-nuclear clarity, and 3D topography of surface microstructure. Probabilistic modeling of high-magnification images using our normalizing flow architecture FUSE-Flow (made freely available as open-source software) enhanced low-magnification imaging with measurable localized uncertainty via variational inference. Comprehensive validation comprised multi-scale fluorescence histology compared with standard H&E histology, and quantitative analyses of senescence, antibiotic toxicity, and nuclear DNA content in tissue models via efficient sampling of thick slices from entire murine organs up to 0.4×8×12mm and 1.3 million cells per surface. This technology addresses long-standing laboratory gaps in high-throughput studies for rapid cellular insights.

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Ang, J. L. Y., Tan, K. H., Yong, A. S. K., Tan, C. W. X., Kng, J. S. J., Tan, C. J. J., … Liang, K. (2024). Multi-scale tissue fluorescence mapping with fiber optic ultraviolet excitation and generative modeling. Optica, 11(5), 673. https://doi.org/10.1364/optica.515501

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