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Publication : PICS: a platform for planar imaging of curved surfaces of brain and other tissue.

First Author  Scoggin JL Year  2019
Journal  Brain Struct Funct Volume  224
Issue  5 Pages  1947-1956
PubMed ID  30903358 Mgi Jnum  J:359193
Mgi Id  MGI:6728331 Doi  10.1007/s00429-019-01861-5
Citation  Scoggin JL, et al. (2019) PICS: a platform for planar imaging of curved surfaces of brain and other tissue. Brain Struct Funct 224(5):1947-1956
abstractText  Optical imaging of wholemount tissue samples provides greater understanding of structure-function relationships as the architecture of these specimens is generally well preserved. However, difficulties arise when attempting to stitch together images of multiple regions of larger, oddly shaped specimens. These difficulties include (1) maintaining consistent signal-to-noise ratios when the overlying sample surface is uneven, (2) ensuring sample viability when live samples are required, and (3) stabilizing the specimen in a fixed position in a flowing medium without distorting the tissue sample. To address these problems, we designed a simple and cost-efficient device that can be 3D-printed and machined. The design for the device, named the Platform for Planar Imaging of Curved Surfaces (PICS), consists of a sample holder, or "cap" with gaps for fluid flow and a depression for securing the sample in a fixed position without glue or pins, a basket with two arms that move along an external radius to rotate the sample around a central axis, and a customizable platform designed to fit on a commercially available temperature control system for slice electrophysiology. We tested the system using wholemounts of the murine subventricular zone (SVZ), which has a high degree of curvature, to assess sample viability and image quality through cell movement for over an hour for each sample. Using the PICS system, tissues remained viable throughout the imaging sessions, there were no noticeable decreases in the image SNR across an imaging plane, and there was no noticeable displacement of the specimen due to fluid flow.
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