Is phototoxicity compromising experimental results?

Light-induced damage to biological samples during fluorescence imaging is known to occur but receives too little attention by researchers.

The December Technology Feature in Nature Methods asks if super-resolution microscopy is right for you and a point that comes up repeatedly from the researchers we interviewed is the danger of phototoxicity and photodamage caused by the high irradiation intensities needed for the illuminating light. This has long been a concern with these methods and many of the papers describing them mention it.

But as discussed in the December Editorial, even fluorescence microscopy with low irradiation intensities can cause dangerous levels of phototoxicity that permanently damage the sample. Microscopists are aware of these concerns but there has been little effort to implement processes intended to reduce the likelihood of it compromising research study results. Dave Piston, Director of the Biophotonics Institute at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, laments that while phototoxicity is a big deal he has gotten zero traction with NIH reviewers on trying to build some rules for it.

There are some good resources available to researchers that highlight the dangers of phototoxicity and provide advice on how to limit it. Methods in Cell Biology Vol 114 has an excellent chapter by Magidson and Khodjakov, Circumventing Photodamage in Live-Cell Microscopy, that should be mandatory reading for all researchers using fluorescence microscopy for biological research. Also, Nikon’s MicroscopyU has a literature list with several dozen references and recommended reading on phototoxicity. It could use some updating but is still useful.

Despite the amount of microscopy literature that discusses phototoxicity, discussion of the phenomenon in research articles published in Nature Journals is conspicuously absent. This is highlighted by a simple full-text search we performed on the HTML versions of research articles published in Nature, Nature Cell Biology, Nature Immunology, Nature Methods and Nature Neuroscience. The articles retrieved were limited to original research articles.

The table below lists the number of occurrences of each of the listed words in the period from January 1, 2005 to November 3, 2013 in each of the indicated journals. The percentages represent the number fraction of articles containing ‘phototoxicity’ relative to the numbers of articles containing each of the microscopy- or fluorescence-related terms. Note that this is NOT a measure of co-occurrence, only a measure of how common the term ‘phototoxicity’ is relative to the other terms.

phototoxicity fluorescence fluorescent microscopy microscope
# # % # % # % # %
Nature 8 2120 0.4% 1925 0.4% 1995 0.4% 1918 0.4%
Nature Cell Biology 8 815 1.0% 728 1.1% 866 0.9% 822 1.0%
Nature Immunology 6 552 1.1% 574 1.0% 408 1.5% 326 1.8%
Nature Methods 27 565 4.8% 494 5.5% 441 6.1% 407 6.6%
Nature Neuroscience 18 639 2.8% 727 2.5% 587 3.1% 736 2.4%

 

The same analysis was repeated with the term ‘photodamage’ to determine if there was a substantial difference in the usage of these two similar terms.

photodamage fluorescence fluorescent microscopy microscope
# # % # % # % # %
Nature 18 2120 0.8% 1925 0.9% 1995 0.9% 1918 0.9%
Nature Cell Biology 6 815 0.7% 728 0.8% 866 0.7% 822 0.7%
Nature Immunology 2 552 0.4% 574 0.3% 408 0.5% 326 0.6%
Nature Methods 29 565 5.1% 494 5.9% 441 6.6% 407 7.1%
Nature Neuroscience 12 639 1.9% 727 1.7% 587 2.0% 736 1.6%

 

These results carry the potentially large caveat that the analysis did not include the text of the supplementary information, but the rarity with which phototoxicity or photodamage is discussed (0.4% to 7% relative to microscopy terms) suggests that researchers don’t appreciate how important it is to pay attention to artifacts that result from light irradiation. Luckily, there are exceptions to this state of affairs.

An excellent example of testing for phototoxicity and the subtle effects it can induce can be found in a manuscript from Jeff Magee’s lab at Janelia Farm Research Campus published last year in Nature. Quoting from the manuscript, “Particular care was taken to limit photodamage during imaging and uncaging. This included the use of a passive 8× pulse splitter in the uncaging path in most experiments to reduce photodamage drastically [Ji, N. et al. Nat. Methods (2008)]. Basal fluorescence of both channels was continuously monitored as an immediate indicator of damage to cellular structures. Subtle signs of damage included decreases in or loss of phasic Ca2+ signals in spine heads in response to either uncaging or current injection, small but persistent depolarization following uncaging, and changes in the kinetics of voltage responses to uncaging or current injection. Experiments were terminated if neurons exhibited any of these phenomena.”

It is easy to see how these changes in Ca2+ responses could easily have been interpreted as real biological effects caused by the uncaged glutamate, rather than the uncaging light itself.

It is unrealistic to expect that any mandates or oversight would be able to prevent or detect such consequences of phototoxicity in research studies. It is essential that investigators themselves be vigilant and implement appropriate controls to detect these effects. Na Ji, also at Janelia Farm Research Campus says, “It is not enough to only look for instant and dramatic signs of phototoxicity. Sometimes the effects may be more subtle and even unperceivable during the imaging period, but may become obvious when the same sample is imaged the next day. Care has to be taken in data collection and interpretation, especially when the biological process under investigation itself is a subtle one.”

Finally, the application is just as important as the imaging method being used. For example, light-sheet microscopy is excellent at reducing irradiation levels in volumetric imaging. But some applications of super-resolution microscopy, even on living samples, might be less susceptible to artifacts caused by phototoxicity than are sensitive long-term imaging applications of living samples by light-sheet microscopy. Nobody’s microscope earns them a free pass on the dangers of photodamage arising from phototoxicity. Everyone needs to be vigilant.

Update: A reader helpfully pointed out that the danger of phototoxicity and photodamage also applies to optogenetics, where light (often in the blue region of the spectrum) is used to control protein activity.

Whole brain cellular-level activity mapping in a second

It is now possible to map the activity of nearly all the neurons in a vertebrate brain at cellular resolution in just over a second. What does this mean for neuroscience research and projects like the Brain Activity Map proposal?

In an Article that just went live in Nature Methods, Misha Ahrens and Philipp Keller from HHMI’s Janelia Farm Research Campus used high-speed light sheet microscopy to image the activity of 80% of the neurons in the brain of a fish larva at speeds of a whole brain every 1.3 seconds. This represents—to our knowledge—the first technology that achieves whole brain imaging of a vertebrate brain at cellular resolution with speeds that approximate neural activity patterns and behavior.

Click on the image to view the video.

Brain activity imaging of a whole zebrafish brain at single-cell resolution. Click on image to view video [20 MB].

Interestingly, the paper comes out at a time when much is being discussed and written about mapping brain activity at the cellular level. This is one of the main proposals of the Brain Activity Map—a project that is being discussed at the White House and could be NIH’s next ‘big science’ project for the next 10-15 years. [Just for clarity, the authors of this work are not formally associated with the BAM proposal].

The details of BAM’s exact goals and a clear roadmap and timeline to achieve them have yet to be presented, but from what its proponents have described in a recent Science paper the main aspiration of the project is to improve our understanding of how whole neuronal circuits work at the cellular level. The project seeks to monitor the activity of whole circuits as well as manipulate them to study their functional role. To reach these goals, first and foremost one must have technology capable of measuring the activity of individual neurons throughout the entire brain in a way that can discriminate individual circuits. The most obvious way to do this is by imaging the activity as it is occurring.

With improvements in the speed and resolution of existing microscopy setups and in the probes for monitoring activity, exhaustive imaging of neuronal function across a small transparent organism was bound to be possible—as this study has now shown.

The study has also made interesting discoveries. The authors saw correlated activity patterns measured at the cellular level that spanned large areas of the brain—pointing to the existence of broadly distributed functional circuits. The next steps will be to determine the causal role that these circuits play in behavior—something that will require improvements in the methods for 3D optogenetics. Obtaining the detailed anatomical map of these circuits will also be key to understand the brain’s organization at its deepest level.

These are some of the types of experiments described in the BAM proposal and they are clearly within reach in the next 10 years–whether through a centralized initiative or through normal lab competition and peer review. While it is expected that in mice, too, functional circuits will span large brain areas, performing these types of experiments in mice will require more methodological imagination. It will not be possible to place a living mouse brain within the microscope system used by Ahrens and Keller to image the zebrafish brain. The mouse brain is significantly bigger, is largely impenetrable to visible light and is surrounded by a skull. Realistically, we may not see methods that enable whole brain activity mapping in mammals at the cellular level for quite a while.

But there is much worth learning about brain function in smaller organisms such as the zebrafish and drosophila, and microscopy systems such as this will be capable of providing important fundamental insights into brain function that are relevant to our understanding of the human brain.

Whether it will be through BAM or not, the neuroscience community has important challenges to tackle ahead. At Nature Methods, we have been actively involved in supporting technology development in the neurosciences from the very beginning and we look forward with enthusiasm to doing so during this exciting period in neuroscience research.

Update: We just published an Editorial on this topic in our May issue.

Fluorescent Proteins and Sensors Webinar – Questions & Answers

Our very first webinar is now live. The topic is “Fluorescent protein and sensors: A practical discussion” and you can register to view it at www.nature.com/webcasts/fluorescent_proteins. Update: Registration link inactivated. Please go here to listen to the archived discussion in .mp3 format.

Nature Methods was joined by Robert Campbell, David Piston and Thomas Knopfel who have been developing and using fluorescent proteins and sensors for years. We had a nice discussion that provided good practical information for users of these tools. If you haven’t watched it, I encourage you to do so. If you watch the webcast within the first month it is live you have the opportunity to submit questions for our participants. Please use the form on the webcast viewing page to submit questions. There will be a delay in providing answers here on our blog while we consult with the participants.

Participants in fluorescent proteins and sensors webinar

Our participants: Robert Campbell, David Piston and Thomas Knopfel

Here we will be posting the questions we receive and answers from our participants. Readers may also comment directly on the blog below but we can not guarantee that any questions asked there will be answered. We do encourage anyone in the community to chime in with their response to any questions that are posed, even if they don’t agree with our participants.