Structural and molecular interrogation of intact biological systems. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Obtaining high-resolution information from a complex system, while maintaining the global perspective needed to understand system function, represents a key challenge in biology. Here we address this challenge with a method (termed CLARITY) for the transformation of intact tissue into a nanoporous hydrogel-hybridized form (crosslinked to a three-dimensional network of hydrophilic polymers) that is fully assembled but optically transparent and macromolecule-permeable. Using mouse brains, we show intact-tissue imaging of long-range projections, local circuit wiring, cellular relationships, subcellular structures, protein complexes, nucleic acids and neurotransmitters. CLARITY also enables intact-tissue in situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry with multiple rounds of staining and de-staining in non-sectioned tissue, and antibody labelling throughout the intact adult mouse brain. Finally, we show that CLARITY enables fine structural analysis of clinical samples, including non-sectioned human tissue from a neuropsychiatric-disease setting, establishing a path for the transmutation of human tissue into a stable, intact and accessible form suitable for probing structural and molecular underpinnings of physiological function and disease.

publication date

  • April 10, 2013

Research

keywords

  • Brain
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional
  • Molecular Imaging

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC4092167

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84878115127

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/nature12107

PubMed ID

  • 23575631

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 497

issue

  • 7449