KEYWORDS: In vivo imaging, Tissues, Windows, Animal model studies, Nonlinear optics, Microlens, Optical microscopy, Histopathology, Tissue optics, Signal generators
Tissue histopathology, reliant on costly and time-consuming hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of thin tissue slices, faces limitations. Label-free non-linear optical microscopy in vivo presents a solution, allowing work on fresh samples. Implantable microstructures prove effective for systematic longitudinal in vivo studies of immunological responses to biomaterials using label-free non-linear optical microscopy. Employing two-photon laser polymerization, we implanted a matrix of 3D lattices in the chorioallantoic membrane of chicken embryos, establishing a 3D reference frame for cell counting. H&E analysis is compared to label-free in vivo non-linear excitation imaging for cell quantification and identifying granulocytes, collagen, and microvessels. Preliminary results in higher animal models demonstrate the transformative potential of this approach, offering an alternative to conventional histopathology for validating biomaterials in in vivo longitudinal studies.
The current protocols for biocompatibility assessment of biomaterials, based on histopathology, require the sacrifice of a huge number of laboratory animals with an unsustainable ethical burden and remarkable cost. Intravital microscopy techniques can be used to study implantation outcomes in real time though with limited capabilities of quantification in longitudinal studies, mainly restricted by the light penetration and the spatial resolution in deep tissues. We present the outline and first tests of a novel chip which aims to enable longitudinal studies of the reaction to the biomaterial implant. The chip is composed of a regular reference microstructure fabricated via two-photon polymerization in the SZ2080 resist. The geometrical design and the planar raster spacing largely determine the mechanical and spectroscopic features of the microstructures. The development, in-vitro characterization and in vivo validation of the Microatlas is performed in living chicken embryos by fluorescence microscopy 3 and 4 days after the implant; the quantification of cell infiltration inside the Microatlas demonstrates its potential as novel scaffold for tissue regeneration.
We describe several bioengineered cell models developed by our group. We develop tools for cell culture allowing fluorescence diagnostics on the cellularised constructs cultured within, both in 3D and prolonged culture times extending to several weeks. These cell models proved able to recapitulate in vitro several slowly developing biological processes such as the regeneration of a cartilaginous tissue by cartilage cells, the formation of a bone metastasis by breast cancer cells, the instruction of adaptive immune cells as occurs in a lymphnode, and the neuroprotective effect on pathological neurons of mesenchymal stem cell secretome. We also scaled down these tools in the aim to better control stem cell function in our models, by applying two-photon laser polymerization to fabricate micro scaffolds for cell expansion. We were able to condition mesenchymal stem cells, neural precursor cells and embryonic stem cells towards maintenance of a greater stemness and multipotency or pluripotency, compared to conventional flat culture. This result opens up an avenue towards a safer use of these cells for stem cells therapies. Finally, we describe a revolutionary concept to implant the cell model in a living organism, to be revascularized by the host allowing for studies involving interactions with the host immune system.
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