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Corrected Super-Resolution Microscopy Enables Nanoscale Imaging of Autofluorescent Lung Macrophages
Authors:Ashley R. Ambrose  Susanne Dechantsreiter  Rajesh Shah  M. Angeles Montero  Anne Marie Quinn  Edith M. Hessel  Soren Beinke  Gillian M. Tannahill  Daniel M. Davis
Affiliation:1.The Lydia Becker Institute of Immunology and Inflammation, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom;2.Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, United Kingdom;3.Cellular Pathology, Wythenshawe Hospital, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, United Kingdom;4.Department of Anatomic Pathology, University Hospital Galway, Galway, Ireland;5.GSK, Stevenage, United Kingdom
Abstract:Observing the cell surface and underlying cytoskeleton at nanoscale resolution using super-resolution microscopy has enabled many insights into cell signaling and function. However, the nanoscale dynamics of tissue-specific immune cells have been relatively little studied. Tissue macrophages, for example, are highly autofluorescent, severely limiting the utility of light microscopy. Here, we report a correction technique to remove autofluorescent noise from stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM) data sets. Simulations and analysis of experimental data identified a moving median filter as an accurate and robust correction technique, which is widely applicable across challenging biological samples. Here, we used this method to visualize lung macrophages activated through Fc receptors by antibody-coated glass slides. Accurate, nanoscale quantification of macrophage morphology revealed that activation induced the formation of cellular protrusions tipped with MHC class I protein. These data are consistent with a role for lung macrophage protrusions in antigen presentation. Moreover, the tetraspanin protein CD81, known to mark extracellular vesicles, appeared in ring-shaped structures (mean diameter 93 ± 50 nm) at the surface of activated lung macrophages. Thus, a moving median filter correction technique allowed us to quantitatively analyze extracellular secretions and membrane structure in tissue-derived immune cells.
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