4.4 Article

Using Light Sheet Fluorescence Microscopy to Image Zebrafish Eye Development

期刊

出版社

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/53966

关键词

Developmental Biology; Issue 110; Developmental biology; Light Sheet Fluorescence Microscopy; Selective Plane Illumination Microscopy; retina; sample mounting; Bead based Registration; BigDataViewer; Multiview Reconstruction; Multiview Deconvolution; Open-source; Fiji

资金

  1. ERC Starting Grant: Quantitative Analysis of the Hourglass Model of Evolution of Development and Human Frontier Science Program Young Investigator grant [RGY0093/2012]
  2. Human Frontier Science Program [CDA-00007/2011]
  3. German Research Foundation (DFG) [SFB 655]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Light sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) is gaining more and more popularity as a method to image embryonic development. The main advantages of LSFM compared to confocal systems are its low phototoxicity, gentle mounting strategies, fast acquisition with high signal to noise ratio and the possibility of imaging samples from various angles (views) for long periods of time. Imaging from multiple views unleashes the full potential of LSFM, but at the same time it can create terabyte-sized datasets. Processing such datasets is the biggest challenge of using LSFM. In this protocol we outline some solutions to this problem. Until recently, LSFM was mostly performed in laboratories that had the expertise to build and operate their own light sheet microscopes. However, in the last three years several commercial implementations of LSFM became available, which are multipurpose and easy to use for any developmental biologist. This article is primarily directed to those researchers, who are not LSFM technology developers, but want to employ LSFM as a tool to answer specific developmental biology questions. Here, we use imaging of zebrafish eye development as an example to introduce the reader to LSFM technology and we demonstrate applications of LSFM across multiple spatial and temporal scales. This article describes a complete experimental protocol starting with the mounting of zebrafish embryos for LSFM. We then outline the options for imaging using the commercially available light sheet microscope. Importantly, we also explain a pipeline for subsequent registration and fusion of multiview datasets using an open source solution implemented as a Fiji plugin. While this protocol focuses on imaging the developing zebrafish eye and processing data from a particular imaging setup, most of the insights and troubleshooting suggestions presented here are of general use and the protocol can be adapted to a variety of light sheet microscopy experiments.

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