Multimodal X-ray imaging of nanocontainer-treated macrophages and calcium distribution in the perilacunar bone matrix

  • Karolina Stachnik
  • Martin Warmer
  • Istvan Mohacsi
  • Vincent Hennicke
  • Pontus Fischer
  • Jan Meyer
  • Tobias Spitzbart
  • Miriam Barthelmess
  • Jacqueline Eich
  • Christian David
  • Claus Feldmann
  • Björn Busse
  • Katharina Jähn
  • Ulrich E. Schaible
  • Alke Meents

Abstract

Studies of biological systems typically require the application of several complementary methods able to yield statistically-relevant results at a unique level of sensitivity. Combined X-ray fluorescence and ptychography offer excellent elemental and structural imaging contrasts at the nanoscale. They enable a robust correlation of elemental distributions with respect to the cellular morphology. Here we extend the applicability of the two modalities to higher X-ray excitation energies, permitting iron mapping. Using a long-range scanning setup, we applied the method to two vital biomedical cases. We quantified the iron distributions in a population of macrophages treated with Mycobacterium-tuberculosis-targeting iron-oxide nanocontainers. Our work allowed to visualize the internalization of the nanocontainer agglomerates in the cytosol. From the iron areal mass maps, we obtained a distribution of antibiotic load per agglomerate and an average areal concentration of nanocontainers in the agglomerates. In the second application we mapped the calcium content in a human bone matrix in close proximity to osteocyte lacunae (perilacunar matrix). A concurrently acquired ptychographic image was used to remove the mass-thickness effect from the raw calcium map. The resulting ptychography-enhanced calcium distribution allowed then to observe a locally lower degree of mineralization of the perilacunar matrix.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.02.2020