Label-free investigation of human collagen morpho-mechanics by correlative SHG, Brillouin, and Raman microscopy
Year: 2020
Authors: Mercatelli R.; Mattana S.; Capozzoli L.; Ratto F.; Rossi F.; Pini R.; Fioretto D.; Pavone F.S.; Caponi S.; Cicchi R.
Autors Affiliation: National Institute of Optics, National Research Council (INO-CNR), Via Nello Carrara 1, Sesto Fiorentino, I-50019, Italy; Aerospazio Tecnologie S.r.l., 1° Strada n.5 Palazzo Vespucci-Ingresso A/D, Guasticce, I-50017, Italy; Department of Physics, University of Florence, Via Giovanni Sansone 1, Sesto Fiorentino, I-50019, Italy; Department of Physics, University of Florence, Via Giovanni Sansone 1, I-50019 Sesto Fiorentino, Italy; Center of Electron Microscopy Laura Bonzi (Ce.M.E), Institute of Chemistry of Organometallic Compounds, National Research Council (ICCOM-CNR), Via Madonna del Piano 10, Sesto Fiorentino, I-50019, Italy; Institute of Applied Physics nello Carrara, National Research Council (IFAC-CNR), Via Madonna del Piano 10, Sesto Fiorentino, I-50019, Italy; Department of Physics and Geology, University of Perugia, Via A. Pascoli, Perugia, I-06123, Italy; CEMIN-Center of Excellence for Innovative Nanostructured Material, Perugia, I-06123, Italy; European Laboratory for Non-linear Spectroscopy (LENS), Via Nello Carrara 1, Sesto Fiorentino, I-50019, Italy; Institute of Materials, National Research Council (IOM-CNR), Unit of Perugia, C/o Department of Physics and Geology, University of Perugia, Via A. Pascoli, Perugia, I-06123, Italy.
Abstract: Tissue morpho-mechanics is gaining an increasing relevance in various fields, including biology, medicine, pathology, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine, since it targets the relationship between morphological features and mechanical properties in biological tissues, which plays an important role in various biological processes including metastasis, wound healing and tissue regeneration. In particular, in every biological tissue, morphological, biochemical and mechanical properties are tightly connected and they influence each other in a correlative manner. For this reason, a correlative approach employing multiple techniques is ideal for targeting tissue morpho-mechanics with an optical approach. Here we report a correlative study performed by optical microscopies, disclosing the supramolecular collagen morphology correlated with its biomechanical and biochemical analyses. In particular, using human corneal tissue as a benchmark, we correlate Second-Harmonic Generation maps with mechanical and biochemical imaging obtained by Brillouin and Raman micro-spectroscopy, demonstrating that the peculiar mechanical functionality of so-called sutural lamellae originates from their distinctive supramolecular organization. A theoretical model based on the ultrastructural symmetry of corneal lamellar domains provides the interpretation of the experimental data at the molecular scale. The proposed methodology opens the way to the non-invasive assessment of tissue morpho-mechanics and holds the potential to be applicable to a broad range of biological and synthetic materials.
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Volume: 11251 Pages from: 112510G to: 112510G
More Information: Symposium on Label-Free Biomedical Imaging and Sensing (LBIS) held at SPIE BiOS Conference
San Francisco, CA – FEB 01-04, 2020KeyWords: Brillouin microscopy, Collagen, Raman microscopy, SHG microscopyDOI: 10.1117/12.2543519