Rapid and gentle volumetric imaging of host-pathogen interactions in salmon skin cells using projective oblique plane microscopy

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

High-speed, low-phototoxicity volumetric imaging is essential to quantify host–pathogen interactions in marine animal cell models, such as internalization of bacteria by Atlantic salmon skin keratocytes (SKCs). We developed an oblique plane microscopy (OPM) platform with an integrated projective OPM (pOPM) mode that preserves standard sample mounting and supports ultra-fast, optically sectioned projections. Leveraging the sparsity of bacterial signal, two pOPM projections at distinct viewing angles allow 3D localization by triangulation, reducing acquisition time and light dose by up to approximately 150-fold relative to full volumetric stacks. The hybrid workflow combines pOPM for rapid, gentle detection with OPM for volumetric context. We characterized system performance using 120 nm fluorescent beads and achieved near-diffraction-limited resolution across a 20 µm depth. In live, two-colour imaging of infected primary SKCs, we acquired 238×158×18 µm3 volumes in 5.3 s and performed 3 h time-lapse recordings at 10 min intervals at 4 h, 28 h, and 52 h post-infection. Automated analysis segmented cells, detected bacteria, and classified their spatial relationship to cells, revealing internalization fractions of approximately 18%, 54%, and 52% at 4 h, 28 h, and 52 h post-infection, respectively. These results demonstrate that OPM and pOPM can quantify SKC–bacteria interactions with subcellular resolution over extended fields and timescales, providing a platform to investigate mechanisms of bacterial internalization and clearance relevant to aquaculture health.

Article activity feed