Tissue Mapping Center

A 3D Tissue Map of the Human Lymphatic System

This lab is working to develop a three-dimensional (3D) tissue map for three major lymphoid organs of the human immune system: spleen, thymus and lymph nodes.

Their approach to developing assay pipelines towards the common goal of a 3D tissue map has initially involved acquiring a macro image of the intact tissue and addressing tissue morphology, using their strengths in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The optical microscopy pipeline will address microanatomical features using formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) and optimal cutting temperature (OCT) compound embedded sections as well as tissue optical clearing and expansion. These specimens are studied from nm to mm resolution using stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM), confocal, multiphoton and light sheet fluorescence microscopies (LSFM), with all pipelines sharing a common file format for simplified 3D reconstruction. Based on the unique role for lymphatic organs in production and trafficking of immune cells, fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) of cells from blood and each lymphatic organ provide a comparison of the patient- specific immune cell repertoire and serve in subsequent single cell RNA-seq analyses. To co-register biomolecules to their cognate cells, the team employs imaging mass cytometry (IMC), multiplex single molecule fluorescence in situ hybridization (smFISH) and multiplexed error-robust FISH (MERFISH) to map cellular protein and mRNA expression, ultimately on each 3D tissue atlas.

 
Fast Facts
Project title:A 3D Tissue Map of the Human Lymphatic System
Organ specialty: Lymphatic system
PI:Mark Atkinson
Grant number:1U54AI142766-01
Learn more: Visit the lab website