Mapping of the three-dimensional lymphatic microvasculature in bladder tumours using light-sheet microscopy
: Tanaka Nobuyuki, Kaczynska Dagmara, Kanatani Shigeaki, Sahlgren Cecilia, Mitura Przemysław, Stepulak Andrzej, Miyakawa Ayako, Wiklund Peter, Uhlén Per
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
: 2018
: British Journal of Cancer
: British Journal of Cancer
: 118
: 7
: 995
: 999
: 5
: 0007-0920
: 1532-1827
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-018-0016-y
: http://www.nature.com/articles/s41416-018-0016-y
: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/30928049
Background: Cancers are heterogeneous and contain various types of irregular structures that can go undetected when examining them with standard two-dimensional microscopes. Studies of intricate networks of vasculature systems, e.g., the tumour lymphatic microvessels, benefit largely from three-dimensional imaging data analysis.
Methods: The new DIPCO (Diagnosing Immunolabeled Paraffin-Embedded Cleared Organs) imaging platform uses three-dimensional light-sheet microscopy and whole-mount immunolabelling of cleared samples to study proteins and micro-anatomies deep inside of tumours.
Results: Here, we uncovered the whole three-dimensional lymphatic microvasculature of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumours from a cohort of 30 patients with bladder cancer. Our results revealed more heterogeneous spatial deviations in more advanced bladder tumours. We also showed that three-dimensional imaging could determine tumour stage and identify vascular or lymphatic system invasion with higher accuracy than standard two-dimensional histological diagnostic methods. There was no association between sample storage times and outcomes, demonstrating that the DIPCO pipeline could be successfully applied on old FFPE samples.
Conclusions: Studying tumour samples with three-dimensional imaging could help us understand the pathological nature of cancers and provide essential information that might improve the accuracy of cancer staging.