4.6 Review

Advances in small animal mesentery models for in vivo flow cytometry, dynamic microscopy, and drug screening

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 192-218

Publisher

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v13.i2.192

Keywords

lymph microcirculation; transmission digital microscopy; rat mesentery; flow cytometry; photothermal technique

Funding

  1. NIBIB NIH HHS [EB005123, R01 EB000873, R21 EB005123, EB001858, EB-000873, R21 EB001858] Funding Source: Medline

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Using animal mesentery with intravital optical microscopy is a well-established experimental model for studying blood and lymph microcirculation in vivo. Recent advances in cell biology and optical techniques provide the basis for extending this model for new applications, which should generate significantly improved experimental data. This review summarizes the achievements in this specific area, including in vivo label-free blood and lymph photothermal flow cytometry, super-sensitive fluorescence image cytometry, light scattering and speckle flow cytometry, microvessel dynamic microscopy, infrared (IR) angiography, and high-speed imaging of individual cells in fast flow. The capabilities of these techniques, using the rat mesentery model, were demonstrated in various studies; e.g., real-time quantitative detection of circulating and migrating individual blood and cancer cells, studies on vascular dynamics with a focus on lymphatics under normal conditions and under different interventions (e.g. lasers, drugs, nicotine), assessment of lymphatic disturbances from experimental lymphedema, monitoring cell traffic between blood and lymph systems, and highspeed imaging of cell transient deformability in flow. In particular, the obtained results demonstrated that individual cell transportation in living organisms depends on cell type (e.g., normal blood or leukemic cells), the cell's functional state (e.g., live, apoptotic, or necrotic), and the functional status of the organism. Possible future applications, including In vivo early diagnosis and prevention of disease, monitoring immune response and apoptosis, chemo- and radio-sensitivity tests, and drug screening, are also discussed. (c) 2007 The WJG Press. All rights reserved.

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