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In Amnio MRI of Mouse Embryos
Authors:Thomas A. Roberts  Francesca C. Norris  Helen Carnaghan  Dawn Savery  Jack A. Wells  Bernard Siow  Peter J. Scambler  Agostino Pierro  Paolo De Coppi  Simon Eaton  Mark F. Lythgoe
Affiliation:1. UCL Centre for Advanced Biomedical Imaging, Division of Medicine, University College London, London, United Kingdom.; 2. UCL Centre for Mathematics and Physics in the Life Sciences and Experimental Biology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.; 3. UCL Institute of Child Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.; University of Washington School of Medicine, United States of America,
Abstract:Mouse embryo imaging is conventionally carried out on ex vivo embryos excised from the amniotic sac, omitting vital structures and abnormalities external to the body. Here, we present an in amnio MR imaging methodology in which the mouse embryo is retained in the amniotic sac and demonstrate how important embryonic structures can be visualised in 3D with high spatial resolution (100 µm/px). To illustrate the utility of in amnio imaging, we subsequently apply the technique to examine abnormal mouse embryos with abdominal wall defects. Mouse embryos at E17.5 were imaged and compared, including three normal phenotype embryos, an abnormal embryo with a clear exomphalos defect, and one with a suspected gastroschisis phenotype. Embryos were excised from the mother ensuring the amnion remained intact and stereo microscopy was performed. Embryos were next embedded in agarose for 3D, high resolution MRI on a 9.4T scanner. Identification of the abnormal embryo phenotypes was not possible using stereo microscopy or conventional ex vivo MRI. Using in amnio MRI, we determined that the abnormal embryos had an exomphalos phenotype with varying severities. In amnio MRI is ideally suited to investigate the complex relationship between embryo and amnion, together with screening for other abnormalities located outside of the mouse embryo, providing a valuable complement to histology and existing imaging methods available to the phenotyping community.
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