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Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera

This work presents a comparison of three autoradiography techniques for imaging biological samples contaminated with actinides: emulsion-based, plastic-based autoradiography and a quantitative digital technique, the iQID camera, based on the numerical analysis of light from a scintillator screen. In...

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Autores principales: Lamart, Stephanie, Miller, Brian W., Van der Meeren, Anne, Tazrart, Anissa, Angulo, Jaime F., Griffiths, Nina M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5638496/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29023595
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186370
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author Lamart, Stephanie
Miller, Brian W.
Van der Meeren, Anne
Tazrart, Anissa
Angulo, Jaime F.
Griffiths, Nina M.
author_facet Lamart, Stephanie
Miller, Brian W.
Van der Meeren, Anne
Tazrart, Anissa
Angulo, Jaime F.
Griffiths, Nina M.
author_sort Lamart, Stephanie
collection PubMed
description This work presents a comparison of three autoradiography techniques for imaging biological samples contaminated with actinides: emulsion-based, plastic-based autoradiography and a quantitative digital technique, the iQID camera, based on the numerical analysis of light from a scintillator screen. In radiation toxicology it has been important to develop means of imaging actinide distribution in tissues as these radionuclides may be heterogeneously distributed within and between tissues after internal contamination. Actinide distribution determines which cells are exposed to alpha radiation and is thus potentially critical for assessing absorbed dose. The comparison was carried out by generating autoradiographs of the same biological samples contaminated with actinides with the three autoradiography techniques. These samples were cell preparations or tissue sections collected from animals contaminated with different physico-chemical forms of actinides. The autoradiograph characteristics and the performances of the techniques were evaluated and discussed mainly in terms of acquisition process, activity distribution patterns, spatial resolution and feasibility of activity quantification. The obtained autoradiographs presented similar actinide distribution at low magnification. Out of the three techniques, emulsion autoradiography is the only one to provide a highly-resolved image of the actinide distribution inherently superimposed on the biological sample. Emulsion autoradiography is hence best interpreted at higher magnifications. However, this technique is destructive for the biological sample. Both emulsion- and plastic-based autoradiography record alpha tracks and thus enabled the differentiation between ionized forms of actinides and oxide particles. This feature can help in the evaluation of decorporation therapy efficacy. The most recent technique, the iQID camera, presents several additional features: real-time imaging, separate imaging of alpha particles and gamma rays, and alpha activity quantification. The comparison of these three autoradiography techniques showed that they are complementary and the choice of the technique depends on the purpose of the imaging experiment.
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spelling pubmed-56384962017-10-20 Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera Lamart, Stephanie Miller, Brian W. Van der Meeren, Anne Tazrart, Anissa Angulo, Jaime F. Griffiths, Nina M. PLoS One Research Article This work presents a comparison of three autoradiography techniques for imaging biological samples contaminated with actinides: emulsion-based, plastic-based autoradiography and a quantitative digital technique, the iQID camera, based on the numerical analysis of light from a scintillator screen. In radiation toxicology it has been important to develop means of imaging actinide distribution in tissues as these radionuclides may be heterogeneously distributed within and between tissues after internal contamination. Actinide distribution determines which cells are exposed to alpha radiation and is thus potentially critical for assessing absorbed dose. The comparison was carried out by generating autoradiographs of the same biological samples contaminated with actinides with the three autoradiography techniques. These samples were cell preparations or tissue sections collected from animals contaminated with different physico-chemical forms of actinides. The autoradiograph characteristics and the performances of the techniques were evaluated and discussed mainly in terms of acquisition process, activity distribution patterns, spatial resolution and feasibility of activity quantification. The obtained autoradiographs presented similar actinide distribution at low magnification. Out of the three techniques, emulsion autoradiography is the only one to provide a highly-resolved image of the actinide distribution inherently superimposed on the biological sample. Emulsion autoradiography is hence best interpreted at higher magnifications. However, this technique is destructive for the biological sample. Both emulsion- and plastic-based autoradiography record alpha tracks and thus enabled the differentiation between ionized forms of actinides and oxide particles. This feature can help in the evaluation of decorporation therapy efficacy. The most recent technique, the iQID camera, presents several additional features: real-time imaging, separate imaging of alpha particles and gamma rays, and alpha activity quantification. The comparison of these three autoradiography techniques showed that they are complementary and the choice of the technique depends on the purpose of the imaging experiment. Public Library of Science 2017-10-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5638496/ /pubmed/29023595 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186370 Text en © 2017 Lamart 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lamart, Stephanie
Miller, Brian W.
Van der Meeren, Anne
Tazrart, Anissa
Angulo, Jaime F.
Griffiths, Nina M.
Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera
title Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera
title_full Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera
title_fullStr Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera
title_full_unstemmed Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera
title_short Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera
title_sort actinide bioimaging in tissues: comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iqid camera
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5638496/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29023595
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186370
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