Person: Ji, Minbiao
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Publication Multicolored Stain-Free Histopathology with Coherent Raman Imaging
(Nature Publishing Group, 2012) Xie, Xiaoliang; Freudiger, Christian Wilhelm; Orringer, Daniel A.; Saar, Brian G.; Ji, Minbiao; Zeng, Qing; Ottoboni, Linda; Ying, Wei; Waeber, Christian; Sims, John R.; De Jager, Philip; Sagher, Oren; Philbert, Martin A.; Xu, Xiaoyin; Kesari, Santosh; Young, Geoffrey; Pfannl, RolfConventional histopathology with hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) has been the gold standard for histopathological diagnosis of a wide range of diseases. However, it is not performed in vivo and requires thin tissue sections obtained after tissue biopsy, which carries risk, particularly in the central nervous system. Here we describe the development of an alternative, multicolored way to visualize tissue in real-time through the use of coherent Raman imaging (CRI), without the use of dyes. CRI relies on intrinsic chemical contrast based on vibrational properties of molecules and intrinsic optical sectioning by nonlinear excitation. We demonstrate that multicolor images originating from (CH_2) and (CH_3) vibrations of lipids and protein, as well as two-photon absorption of hemoglobin, can be obtained with subcellular resolution from fresh tissue. These stain-free histopathological images show resolutions similar to those obtained by conventional techniques, but do not require tissue fixation, sectioning or staining of the tissue analyzed.
Publication Rapid, Label-Free Detection of Brain Tumors with Stimulated Raman Scattering Microscopy
(American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2013) Ji, Minbiao; Orringer, Daniel A.; Freudiger, Christian Wilhelm; Ramkissoon, Shakti H.; Liu, Xiaohui; Lau, Darryl; Golby, Alexandra; Norton, Isaiah Hakim; Hayashi, Marika; Agar, Nathalie; Young, Geoffrey; Spino, Cathie; Santagata, Sandro; Camelo-Piragua, Sandra; Ligon, Keith; Sagher, Oren; Xie, XiaoliangSurgery is an essential component in the treatment of brain tumors. However, delineating tumor from normal brain remains a major challenge. We describe the use of stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy for differentiating healthy human and mouse brain tissue from tumor-infiltrated brain based on histoarchitectural and biochemical differences. Unlike traditional histopathology, SRS is a label-free technique that can be rapidly performed in situ. SRS microscopy was able to differentiate tumor from nonneoplastic tissue in an infiltrative human glioblastoma xenograft mouse model based on their different Raman spectra. We further demonstrated a correlation between SRS and hematoxylin and eosin microscopy for detection of glioma infiltration (κ = 0.98). Finally, we applied SRS microscopy in vivo in mice during surgery to reveal tumor margins that were undetectable under standard operative conditions. By providing rapid intraoperative assessment of brain tissue, SRS microscopy may ultimately improve the safety and accuracy of surgeries where tumor boundaries are visually indistinct.
Publication Multicolor Stimulated Raman Scattering Microscopy with a Rapidly Tunable Optical Parametric Oscillator
(Optical Society of America, 2013) Kong, Lingjie; Ji, Minbiao; Holtom, Gary R.; Fu, Dan; Freudiger, Christian Wilhelm; Xie, XiaoliangStimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy allows label-free chemical imaging based on vibrational spectroscopy. Narrowband excitation with picosecond lasers creates the highest signal levels and enables imaging speeds up to video-rate, but it sacrifices chemical specificity in samples with overlapping bands compared to broadband (multiplex) excitation. We develop a rapidly tunable picosecond optical parametric oscillator with an electro-optical tunable Lyot filter, and demonstrate multicolor SRS microscopy with synchronized line-by-line wavelength tuning to avoid spectral artifacts due to sample movement. We show sensitive imaging of three different kinds of polymer beads and live HeLa cells with moving intracellular lipid droplets.
Publication Multicolor stimulated Raman scattering microscopy
(Informa UK (Taylor & Francis), 2012) Lu, Fake; Ji, Minbiao; Fu, Dan; Ni, Xiaohui; Freudiger, Christian Wilhelm; Holtom, Gary; Xie, XiaoliangStimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy has opened up a wide range of biochemical imaging applications by probing a particular Raman-active molecule vibrational mode in the specimen. However, the original implementation with picosecond pulse excitation can only realize rapid chemical mapping with a single Raman band. Here we present a novel SRS microscopic technique using a grating-based pulse shaper for excitation and a grating-based spectrograph for detection to achieve simultaneous multicolor SRS imaging with high sensitivity and high acquisition speeds. In particular, we use a linear combination of the measured (CH_2) and (CH_3) stretching signals to map the distributions of protein and lipid contents simultaneously.
Publication Detection of human brain tumor infiltration with quantitative stimulated Raman scattering microscopy
(American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2015) Ji, Minbiao; Lewis, Spencer; Camelo-Piragua, Sandra; Ramkissoon, Shakti H.; Snuderl, Matija; Venneti, Sriram; Fisher-Hubbard, Amanda; Garrard, Mia; Fu, Dan; Wang, Anthony C.; Heth, Jason A.; Maher, Cormac O.; Sanai, Nader; Johnson, Timothy D.; Freudiger, Christian; Sagher, Oren; Xie, Xiaoliang; Orringer, Daniel A.Differentiating tumor from normal brain is a major barrier to achieving optimal outcome in brain tumor surgery. New imaging techniques for visualizing tumor margins during surgery are needed to improve surgical results. We recently demonstrated the ability of stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy, a nondestructive, label-free optical method, to reveal glioma infiltration in animal models. We show that SRS reveals human brain tumor infiltration in fresh, unprocessed surgical specimens from 22 neurosurgical patients. SRS detects tumor infiltration in near-perfect agreement with standard hematoxylin and eosin light microscopy (κ = 0.86). The unique chemical contrast specific to SRS microscopy enables tumor detection by revealing quantifiable alterations in tissue cellularity, axonal density, and protein/lipid ratio in tumor-infiltrated tissues. To ensure that SRS microscopic data can be easily used in brain tumor surgery, without the need for expert interpretation, we created a classifier based on cellularity, axonal density, and protein/lipid ratio in SRS images capable of detecting tumor infiltration with 97.5% sensitivity and 98.5% specificity. Quantitative SRS microscopy detects the spread of tumor cells, even in brain tissue surrounding a tumor that appears grossly normal. By accurately revealing tumor infiltration, quantitative SRS microscopy holds potential for improving the accuracy of brain tumor surgery.