Macrophage mediated mesoscale brain mechanical homeostasis mechanically imaged via optical tweezers and Brillouin microscopy <i>in vivo</i>

Woong Young So(National Institutes of Health), Bailey Johnson(National Institutes of Health), Patricia B. Gordon(National Institutes of Health), Kevin Bishop(National Institutes of Health), Hyeyeon Gong(National Institutes of Health), Hannah A Burr(National Institutes of Health), Jack R. Staunton(National Institutes of Health), Chenchen Handler(University of Maryland, College Park), Raman Sood(National Human Genome Research Institute), Giuliano Scarcelli(University of Maryland, College Park), Kandice Tanner(National Institutes of Health)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
December 27, 2023
Cited by 4Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Tissues are active materials where epithelial turnover, immune surveillance, and remodeling of stromal cells such as macrophages all regulate form and function. Scattering modalities such as Brillouin microscopy (BM) can non-invasively access mechanical signatures at GHz. However, our traditional understanding of tissue material properties is derived mainly from modalities which probe mechanical properties at different frequencies. Thus, reconciling measurements amongst these modalities remains an active area. Here, we compare optical tweezer active microrheology (OT-AMR) and Brillouin microscopy (BM) to longitudinally map brain development in the larval zebrafish. We determine that each measurement is able to detect a mechanical signature linked to functional units of the brain. We demonstrate that the corrected BM-Longitudinal modulus using a density factor correlates well with OT-AMR storage modulus at lower frequencies. We also show that the brain tissue mechanical properties are dependent on both the neuronal architecture and the presence of macrophages. Moreover, the BM technique is able to delineate the contributions to mechanical properties of the macrophage from that due to colony stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R) mediated stromal remodeling. Here, our data suggest that macrophage remodeling is instrumental in the maintenance of tissue mechanical homeostasis during development. Moreover, the strong agreement between the OT-AM and BM further demonstrates that scattering-based technique is sensitive to both large and minute structural modification in vivo .


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