4.3 Article

3D volumes constructed from pixel-based images by digitally clearing plant and animal tissue

Journal

JOURNAL OF MICROSCOPY
Volume 240, Issue 2, Pages 122-129

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2818.2010.03393.x

Keywords

Adobe After Effects; biopsy; frozen plant; in situ hybridization; light microscopy; liver; lung; paraffin; radiofrequency ablation; tumour; 3D reconstruction

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P>Construction of three-dimensional volumes from a series of two-dimensional images has been restricted by the limited capacity to decrease the opacity of tissue. The use of commercial software that allows colour-keying and manipulation of two-dimensional images in true three-dimensional space allowed us to construct three-dimensional volumes from pixel-based images of stained plant and animal tissue without generating vector information. We present three-dimensional volumes of (1) the crown of an oat plant showing internal responses to a freezing treatment, (2) a sample of a hepatocellular carcinoma from a woodchuck liver that had been heat-treated with computer-guided radiofrequency ablation to induce necrosis in the central portion of the tumour, and (3) several features of a sample of mouse lung. The technique is well suited to images from large sections (greater than 1 mm) generated from paraffin-embedded tissues. It is widely applicable, having potential to recover three-dimensional information at virtually any resolution inherent in images generated by light microscopy, computer tomography, magnetic resonance imaging or electron microscopy.

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