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Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish

Optical projection tomography (OPT) provides a non-invasive 3-D imaging modality that can be applied to longitudinal studies of live disease models, including in zebrafish. Current limitations include the requirement of a minimum number of angular projections for reconstruction of reasonable OPT ima...

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Autores principales: Correia, Teresa, Lockwood, Nicola, Kumar, Sunil, Yin, Jun, Ramel, Marie-Christine, Andrews, Natalie, Katan, Matilda, Bugeon, Laurence, Dallman, Margaret J., McGinty, James, Frankel, Paul, French, Paul M. W., Arridge, Simon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4550250/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26308086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136213
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author Correia, Teresa
Lockwood, Nicola
Kumar, Sunil
Yin, Jun
Ramel, Marie-Christine
Andrews, Natalie
Katan, Matilda
Bugeon, Laurence
Dallman, Margaret J.
McGinty, James
Frankel, Paul
French, Paul M. W.
Arridge, Simon
author_facet Correia, Teresa
Lockwood, Nicola
Kumar, Sunil
Yin, Jun
Ramel, Marie-Christine
Andrews, Natalie
Katan, Matilda
Bugeon, Laurence
Dallman, Margaret J.
McGinty, James
Frankel, Paul
French, Paul M. W.
Arridge, Simon
author_sort Correia, Teresa
collection PubMed
description Optical projection tomography (OPT) provides a non-invasive 3-D imaging modality that can be applied to longitudinal studies of live disease models, including in zebrafish. Current limitations include the requirement of a minimum number of angular projections for reconstruction of reasonable OPT images using filtered back projection (FBP), which is typically several hundred, leading to acquisition times of several minutes. It is highly desirable to decrease the number of required angular projections to decrease both the total acquisition time and the light dose to the sample. This is particularly important to enable longitudinal studies, which involve measurements of the same fish at different time points. In this work, we demonstrate that the use of an iterative algorithm to reconstruct sparsely sampled OPT data sets can provide useful 3-D images with 50 or fewer projections, thereby significantly decreasing the minimum acquisition time and light dose while maintaining image quality. A transgenic zebrafish embryo with fluorescent labelling of the vasculature was imaged to acquire densely sampled (800 projections) and under-sampled data sets of transmitted and fluorescence projection images. The under-sampled OPT data sets were reconstructed using an iterative total variation-based image reconstruction algorithm and compared against FBP reconstructions of the densely sampled data sets. To illustrate the potential for quantitative analysis following rapid OPT data acquisition, a Hessian-based method was applied to automatically segment the reconstructed images to select the vasculature network. Results showed that 3-D images of the zebrafish embryo and its vasculature of sufficient visual quality for quantitative analysis can be reconstructed using the iterative algorithm from only 32 projections—achieving up to 28 times improvement in imaging speed and leading to total acquisition times of a few seconds.
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spelling pubmed-45502502015-09-01 Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish Correia, Teresa Lockwood, Nicola Kumar, Sunil Yin, Jun Ramel, Marie-Christine Andrews, Natalie Katan, Matilda Bugeon, Laurence Dallman, Margaret J. McGinty, James Frankel, Paul French, Paul M. W. Arridge, Simon PLoS One Research Article Optical projection tomography (OPT) provides a non-invasive 3-D imaging modality that can be applied to longitudinal studies of live disease models, including in zebrafish. Current limitations include the requirement of a minimum number of angular projections for reconstruction of reasonable OPT images using filtered back projection (FBP), which is typically several hundred, leading to acquisition times of several minutes. It is highly desirable to decrease the number of required angular projections to decrease both the total acquisition time and the light dose to the sample. This is particularly important to enable longitudinal studies, which involve measurements of the same fish at different time points. In this work, we demonstrate that the use of an iterative algorithm to reconstruct sparsely sampled OPT data sets can provide useful 3-D images with 50 or fewer projections, thereby significantly decreasing the minimum acquisition time and light dose while maintaining image quality. A transgenic zebrafish embryo with fluorescent labelling of the vasculature was imaged to acquire densely sampled (800 projections) and under-sampled data sets of transmitted and fluorescence projection images. The under-sampled OPT data sets were reconstructed using an iterative total variation-based image reconstruction algorithm and compared against FBP reconstructions of the densely sampled data sets. To illustrate the potential for quantitative analysis following rapid OPT data acquisition, a Hessian-based method was applied to automatically segment the reconstructed images to select the vasculature network. Results showed that 3-D images of the zebrafish embryo and its vasculature of sufficient visual quality for quantitative analysis can be reconstructed using the iterative algorithm from only 32 projections—achieving up to 28 times improvement in imaging speed and leading to total acquisition times of a few seconds. Public Library of Science 2015-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4550250/ /pubmed/26308086 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136213 Text en © 2015 Correia et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Correia, Teresa
Lockwood, Nicola
Kumar, Sunil
Yin, Jun
Ramel, Marie-Christine
Andrews, Natalie
Katan, Matilda
Bugeon, Laurence
Dallman, Margaret J.
McGinty, James
Frankel, Paul
French, Paul M. W.
Arridge, Simon
Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish
title Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish
title_full Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish
title_fullStr Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish
title_full_unstemmed Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish
title_short Accelerated Optical Projection Tomography Applied to In Vivo Imaging of Zebrafish
title_sort accelerated optical projection tomography applied to in vivo imaging of zebrafish
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4550250/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26308086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136213
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