Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology and John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138.
Departament de Biologia Cellular, Fisiologia i Immunologia, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona.
Hum Reprod. 2019 Dec 1;34(12):2349-2361. doi: 10.1093/humrep/dez210.
Is the combined use of fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM)-based metabolic imaging and second harmonic generation (SHG) spindle imaging a feasible and safe approach for noninvasive embryo assessment?
Metabolic imaging can sensitively detect meaningful metabolic changes in embryos, SHG produces high-quality images of spindles and the methods do not significantly impair embryo viability.
Proper metabolism is essential for embryo viability. Metabolic imaging is a well-tested method for measuring metabolism of cells and tissues, but it is unclear if it is sensitive enough and safe enough for use in embryo assessment.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: This study consisted of time-course experiments and control versus treatment experiments. We monitored the metabolism of 25 mouse oocytes with a noninvasive metabolic imaging system while exposing them to oxamate (cytoplasmic lactate dehydrogenase inhibitor) and rotenone (mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation inhibitor) in series. Mouse embryos (n = 39) were measured every 2 h from the one-cell stage to blastocyst in order to characterize metabolic changes occurring during pre-implantation development. To assess the safety of FLIM illumination, n = 144 illuminated embryos were implanted into n = 12 mice, and n = 108 nonilluminated embryos were implanted into n = 9 mice.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Experiments were performed in mouse embryos and oocytes. Samples were monitored with noninvasive, FLIM-based metabolic imaging of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) autofluorescence. Between NADH cytoplasm, NADH mitochondria and FAD mitochondria, a single metabolic measurement produces up to 12 quantitative parameters for characterizing the metabolic state of an embryo. For safety experiments, live birth rates and pup weights (mean ± SEM) were used as endpoints. For all test conditions, the level of significance was set at P < 0.05.
Measured FLIM parameters were highly sensitive to metabolic changes due to both metabolic perturbations and embryo development. For oocytes, metabolic parameter values were compared before and after exposure to oxamate and rotenone. The metabolic measurements provided a basis for complete separation of the data sets. For embryos, metabolic parameter values were compared between the first division and morula stages, morula and blastocyst and first division and blastocyst. The metabolic measurements again completely separated the data sets. Exposure of embryos to excessive illumination dosages (24 measurements) had no significant effect on live birth rate (5.1 ± 0.94 pups/mouse for illuminated group; 5.7 ± 1.74 pups/mouse for control group) or pup weights (1.88 ± 0.10 g for illuminated group; 1.89 ± 0.11 g for control group).
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: The study was performed using a mouse model, so conclusions concerning sensitivity and safety may not generalize to human embryos. A limitation of the live birth data is also that although cages were routinely monitored, we could not preclude that some runt pups may have been eaten.
Promising proof-of-concept results demonstrate that FLIM with SHG provide detailed biological information that may be valuable for the assessment of embryo and oocyte quality. Live birth experiments support the method's safety, arguing for further studies of the clinical utility of these techniques.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): Supported by the Blavatnik Biomedical Accelerator Grant at Harvard University and by the Harvard Catalyst/The Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center (National Institutes of Health Award UL1 TR001102), by NSF grants DMR-0820484 and PFI-TT-1827309 and by NIH grant R01HD092550-01. T.S. was supported by a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Biology grant (1308878). S.F. and S.A. were supported by NSF MRSEC DMR-1420382. Becker and Hickl GmbH sponsored the research with the loaning of equipment for FLIM. T.S. and D.N. are cofounders and shareholders of LuminOva, Inc., and co-hold patents (US20150346100A1 and US20170039415A1) for metabolic imaging methods. D.S. is on the scientific advisory board for Cooper Surgical and has stock options with LuminOva, Inc.
荧光寿命成像显微镜(FLIM)代谢成像与二次谐波产生(SHG)纺锤体成像的联合使用是否是一种可行且安全的非侵入性胚胎评估方法?
代谢成像可以灵敏地检测胚胎中有意义的代谢变化,SHG 可产生高质量的纺锤体图像,且这些方法不会显著降低胚胎活力。
适当的代谢对于胚胎活力至关重要。代谢成像已被广泛测试,可用于测量细胞和组织的代谢,但尚不清楚其是否足够灵敏且安全,适用于胚胎评估。
研究设计、规模、持续时间:本研究包括时间过程实验和对照与处理实验。我们使用非侵入性代谢成像系统监测 25 个小鼠卵母细胞的代谢,同时将其暴露于草氨酸(细胞质乳酸脱氢酶抑制剂)和鱼藤酮(线粒体氧化磷酸化抑制剂)中。从单细胞期到囊胚期,每隔 2 小时测量一次小鼠胚胎(n=39),以描述植入前发育过程中发生的代谢变化。为了评估 FLIM 照明的安全性,n=144 个照射胚胎被植入 n=12 只小鼠中,n=108 个未照射胚胎被植入 n=9 只小鼠中。
参与者/材料、设置、方法:实验在小鼠胚胎和卵母细胞中进行。样品用非侵入性、基于 FLIM 的烟酰胺腺嘌呤二核苷酸(NADH)和黄素腺嘌呤二核苷酸(FAD)自发荧光代谢成像进行监测。在 NADH 细胞质、NADH 线粒体和 FAD 线粒体之间,单个代谢测量可产生多达 12 个定量参数,用于描述胚胎的代谢状态。对于安全性实验,活产率和幼仔体重(平均值±SEM)用作终点。对于所有测试条件,显著性水平均设为 P<0.05。
由于代谢变化和胚胎发育,测量的 FLIM 参数对代谢变化非常敏感。对于卵母细胞,在暴露于草氨酸和鱼藤酮前后比较代谢参数值。代谢测量为数据集的完全分离提供了基础。对于胚胎,在第一次分裂和桑葚胚阶段、桑葚胚和囊胚以及第一次分裂和囊胚之间比较代谢参数值。代谢测量再次完全分离了数据集。将胚胎暴露于过量的照射剂量(24 次测量)对活产率(照射组每只小鼠 5.1±0.94 只幼仔;对照组 5.7±1.74 只幼仔)或幼仔体重(照射组 1.88±0.10g;对照组 1.89±0.11g)没有显著影响。
局限性、谨慎的原因:该研究使用了小鼠模型,因此关于敏感性和安全性的结论可能不适用于人类胚胎。活产数据的一个局限性还在于,尽管笼子经常进行监测,但我们不能排除一些幼仔可能已经被吃掉了。
有希望的概念验证结果表明,FLIM 与 SHG 提供了详细的生物学信息,这对于胚胎和卵母细胞质量的评估可能很有价值。活产实验支持该方法的安全性,这为进一步研究这些技术的临床应用提供了依据。
研究资金/利益冲突:得到哈佛大学生物医学加速计划和哈佛临床与转化科学中心(美国国立卫生研究院授权 UL1 TR001102)、美国国家科学基金会 DMR-0820484 和 PFI-TT-1827309 以及 NIH R01HD092550-01 资助的支持。T.S. 得到了美国国家科学基金会博士后研究生物学奖学金(1308878)的支持。S.F. 和 S.A. 得到了 NSF MRSEC DMR-1420382 的资助。Becker 和 Hickl GmbH 赞助了这项研究,并提供了 FLIM 设备的租赁。T.S. 和 D.N. 是 LuminOva,Inc. 的联合创始人兼股东,共同拥有代谢成像方法的专利(US20150346100A1 和 US20170039415A1)。D.S. 是 Cooper Surgical 的科学顾问委员会成员,并且拥有 LuminOva,Inc. 的股票期权。