» Articles » PMID: 37213258

Comparing Confocal and Two-photon Ca Imaging of Thin Low-scattering Preparations

Overview
Specialty Biophysics
Date 2023 May 22
PMID 37213258
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Ca imaging provides insight into biological processes ranging from subcellular dynamics to neural network activity. Two-photon microscopy has assumed a dominant role in Ca imaging. The longer wavelength infra-red illumination undergoes less scattering, and absorption is confined to the focal plane. Two-photon imaging can thus penetrate thick tissue ∼10-fold more deeply than single-photon visible imaging to make two-photon microscopy an exceptionally powerful method for probing function in intact brain. However, two-photon excitation produces photobleaching and photodamage that increase very steeply with light intensity, limiting how strongly one can illuminate. In thin samples, illumination intensity can assume a dominant role in determining signal quality, raising the possibility that single-photon microscopy may be preferable. We therefore tested laser scanning single-photon and two-photon microscopy side by side with Ca imaging in neuronal compartments at the surface of a brain slice. We optimized illumination intensity for each light source to obtain the brightest signal without photobleaching. Intracellular Ca rises elicited by one action potential had twice the signal/noise ratio with confocal as with two-photon imaging in axons, were 31% higher in dendrites, and about the same in cell bodies. The superior performance of confocal imaging in finer neuronal processes likely reflects the dominance of shot noise when fluorescence is dim. Thus, when out-of-focus absorption and scattering are not issues, single-photon confocal imaging can yield better quality signals than two-photon microscopy.

Citing Articles

Diffusion Smart-seq3 of breast cancer spheroids to explore spatial tumor biology and test evolutionary principles of tumor heterogeneity.

Cougnoux A, Mahmoud L, Johnsson P, Eroglu A, Gsell L, Rosenbauer J Sci Rep. 2025; 15(1):3811.

PMID: 39885179 PMC: 11782488. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-83989-x.


Somatostatin modulation of initial fusion pores in Ca-triggered exocytosis from mouse chromaffin cells.

Cheng J, Jackson M J Physiol. 2024; .

PMID: 39141801 PMC: 11825891. DOI: 10.1113/JP286175.

References
1.
Mutze J, Iyer V, Macklin J, Colonell J, Karsh B, Petrasek Z . Excitation spectra and brightness optimization of two-photon excited probes. Biophys J. 2012; 102(4):934-44. PMC: 3283774. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2011.12.056. View

2.
Ricken S, Leipziger J, Greger R, Nitschke R . Simultaneous measurements of cytosolic and mitochondrial Ca2+ transients in HT29 cells. J Biol Chem. 1998; 273(52):34961-9. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.273.52.34961. View

3.
Jackson M, Redman S . Calcium dynamics, buffering, and buffer saturation in the boutons of dentate granule-cell axons in the hilus. J Neurosci. 2003; 23(5):1612-21. PMC: 6741953. View

4.
Rangaraju V, Calloway N, Ryan T . Activity-driven local ATP synthesis is required for synaptic function. Cell. 2014; 156(4):825-35. PMC: 3955179. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2013.12.042. View

5.
Hopt A, Neher E . Highly nonlinear photodamage in two-photon fluorescence microscopy. Biophys J. 2001; 80(4):2029-36. PMC: 1301392. DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(01)76173-5. View