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Publication : Two-photon imaging of the mammalian retina with ultrafast pulsing laser.

First Author  Palczewska G Year  2018
Journal  JCI Insight Volume  3
Issue  17 PubMed ID  30185665
Mgi Jnum  J:282073 Mgi Id  MGI:6381496
Doi  10.1172/jci.insight.121555 Citation  Palczewska G, et al. (2018) Two-photon imaging of the mammalian retina with ultrafast pulsing laser. JCI Insight 3(17)
abstractText  Noninvasive imaging of visual system components in vivo is critical for understanding the causal mechanisms of retinal diseases and for developing therapies for their treatment. However, ultraviolet light needed to excite endogenous fluorophores that participate in metabolic processes of the retina is highly attenuated by the anterior segment of the human eye. In contrast, 2-photon excitation fluorescence imaging with pulsed infrared light overcomes this obstacle. Reducing retinal exposure to laser radiation remains a major barrier in advancing this technology to studies in humans. To increase fluorescence intensity and reduce the requisite laser power, we modulated ultrashort laser pulses with high-order dispersion compensation and applied sensorless adaptive optics and custom image recovery software and observed an over 300% increase in fluorescence of endogenous retinal fluorophores when laser pulses were shortened from 75 fs to 20 fs. No functional or structural changes to the retina were detected after exposure to 2-photon excitation imaging light with 20-fs pulses. Moreover, wide bandwidth associated with short pulses enables excitation of multiple fluorophores with different absorption spectra and thus can provide information about their relative changes and intracellular distribution. These data constitute a substantial advancement for safe 2-photon fluorescence imaging of the human eye.
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